President Vladimir Putin has ordered a strategic holding action, effectively freezing Russia’s deployed nuclear arsenal at the limits of the expired New START treaty for one year. The move is a temporary measure designed to prevent a rapid unraveling of global strategic stability.
Putin explained the decision as a pragmatic necessity. “We believe it is justified to try to maintain the status quo established by the New START Treaty during the current, rather turbulent period,” he stated. This means Russia will cap its deployed warheads at 1,550.
This holding action is not a unilateral retreat. Putin made it clear that its continuation depends on the United States also holding its position. He warned that the policy is only “viable” if the U.S. refrains from actions that would disrupt the “balance of deterrence.”
The Russian leader also hopes this period of stasis can create momentum for diplomacy. He suggested that it could foster a better environment for a “substantive strategic dialogue,” which has been stalled amid deep-seated animosity between the two powers.
For the next year, this freeze will be in effect. It is a tactical pause, not a permanent solution, and Russia has explicitly reserved the right to change course based on its future analysis of U.S. actions and the broader geopolitical climate.