
The Inquiry Is nuclear disarmament set to self-destruct?
Jan 13, 2026
Hermann Wentker, a Cold War historian, joins Alexandra Bell, CEO of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Mike Albertson, an arms control expert, and Nathalie Tocci, a European security policy professor. They discuss the imminent expiry of the New START treaty and its potential chaos for nuclear arsenals. The risks of a 'free for all' in nuclear stockpiles are highlighted, alongside challenges posed by states outside the NPT. The guests warn that our choices today could either prevent a return to Cold War tensions or invite increased proliferation.
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The NPT's Grand Bargain Worked, Mostly
- The NPT's 'grand bargain' limited proliferation by trading disarmament commitments for peaceful nuclear access.
- It greatly reduced the projected spread of nuclear-armed states despite imperfections.
Bomb Uranium Became Lightbulb Fuel
- The US bought highly enriched uranium from Russia after the Soviet collapse to convert it to reactor fuel.
- At one point much civilian electricity on the US east coast ran on former Soviet weapon material.
Verification, Not Just Numbers, Matters
- New START combined numerical caps with a strong verification regime of data exchanges and on-site inspections.
- That verification made reductions credible and durable between Washington and Moscow.

