See also Apple Computer; AT&T breakup; Book
publishing; Business and the economy in Canada;
Business and the economy in the United States; Ca-
ble television; CAD/CAM technology; Cell phones;
Compact discs (CDs); Computers; Fax machines;
Home shopping channels; Home video rentals;
Infomercials; Microsoft; Music videos; Science and
technology; Superconductors;Third Wave, The;Vir-
tual reality; Voicemail.
Intermediate-Range Nuclear
Forces (INF) Treaty
Identification Arms control treaty
between the United States and the
Soviet Union
Date Signed on December 8, 1987;
entered into force on June 1, 1988
The deployment of a number of intermediate-
range missiles during the 1970’s had caused
increasing anxiety for people on both sides of
the Cold War. The Intermediate-Range Nu-
clear Forces (INF) Treaty led to the elimina-
tion of all missiles in this classification. The
agreement represented a level of trust be-
tween the two nations’ governments that
had seemed unthinkable at the beginning of
the decade.
Throughout the Cold War, both the
United States and the Soviet Union
sought to gain an advantage through
a wide range of foreign policy initia-
tives and military operations. While
this jockeying occurred in many loca-
tions around the globe, Europe was
the focus of the superpowers’ rivalry.
The tension between them and its Eu-
ropean focus resulted from the post-
World War II division of the continent
into the communist-controlled East and
the democratic West, which was allied
with the United States. The Eastern
European nations were allied through
a treaty known as the Warsaw Pact,
while the Western allies were members
of the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza-
tion (NATO). While the number of de-
ployed troops had been scaled back
since the immediate postwar period, American and
Soviet forces still faced each other across the lines
drawn when the triumphant Allies partitioned Ger-
many.
For most of this period, both sides were content
with conventional weapons. However, in 1975, the
Soviet Union deployed its portable SS-20 intermedi-
ate-range missile, equipped with nuclear warheads.
An intermediate-range missile is one with a shorter
range than that of long-range intercontinental bal-
listic missiles (ICBMs). As a result, they are posi-
tioned closer to their targets than are ICBMs, and
they can reach those targets in a shorter period of
time, giving an opponent less warning and less op-
The Eighties in America Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty 519
Treaty Between the United States of America and the Union
of Soviet Socialist Republics on the Elimination of Their
Intermediate-Range and Shorter-Range Missiles
Signed at Washington December 8, 1987
Ratification advised by U.S. Senate May 27, 1988
Instruments of ratification exchanged June 1, 1988
Entered into force June 1, 1988
Proclaimed by U.S. President December 27, 1988
The United States of America and the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics, hereinafter referred to as the Parties,
Conscious that nuclear war would have devastating con-
sequences for all mankind,
Guided by the objective of strengthening strategic sta-
bility,
Convinced that the measures set forth in this Treaty will
help to reduce the risk of outbreak of war and strengthen
international peace and security, and
Mindful of their obligations under Article VI of the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,
Have agreed as follows:
Article I
In accordance with the provisions of this Treaty which in-
cludes the Memorandum of Understanding and Protocols
which form an integral part thereof, each Party shall elimi-
nate its intermediate-range and shorter-range missiles, not
have such systems thereafter, and carry out the other obliga-
tions set forth in this Treaty.
Preamble and Article I of the Intermediate-Range
Nuclear Forces Treaty