The Routledge Dictionary of Politics, Third Edition

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SALT (Strategic Arms Limitation Talks)


A period ofde ́tentebetween the USA and the Soviet Union (formally, the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics—USSR) allowed for the first serious
negotiations onarms controlbetween thesuperpowersto commence in



  1. A coincidence of different motives made for relatively easy and rapid
    progress. The USA wished to avoid an expensivearms racewith the USSR,
    in part because it was heavily involved in the financially ruinousVietnam
    War. Furthermore it was very much in the USA’s interest to have the USSR
    remain relatively passive while it was so heavily engaged in South-East Asia.
    The USSR had been seekingnuclear paritywith the USA ever since the
    Cuban missile crisisof 1962, and could not hope to achieve this if the USA
    was to continue increasing its missile stock. Even given this no agreement
    could have been achieved but for a specific fact about strategic nuclear war. At
    least according to the US theory ofmutual assured destruction, nuclear
    weapons were unlikeconventional armsbecause there was an upper limit to
    the number of warheads that could possibly be needed. The USA believed that
    its nuclear inventory had already reached such a level, and that adding to it
    would not give any added security, so were prepared to agree to some form of
    parity with the USSR. The SALT I Treaty (technically the Interim Agreement
    on Strategic Offensive Arms), signed in 1972, was, however, very limited
    because of verification problems. Neither country was prepared to allow on-
    site inspection, so verification had to be limited to what are known as ‘national
    technical means’. This essentially meant reconnaissance satellites, which could
    do little more than count the total numbers of missile silos or, as SALT I’s critics
    put it, ‘holes in the ground’. Very little could be ascertained about the
    technology installed in the missiles, and even less about submarine-launched
    ballistic missiles (SLBMs). Nevertheless, SALT I brought a degree of stability
    by putting an upper limit on the total number of missiles each country could
    have, based roughly on existing US force levels. SALT I was always intended as
    a temporary holding operation, to be completed in a more ambitious way by a
    second treaty, on which negotiations started immediately. TheAnti-Ballistic

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