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- WORLD, Page 35World NotesARMS CONTROLOff to a Bad START?
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- The two new chief negotiators seemed almost chummy when the
- Strategic Arms Reduction Talks resumed in Geneva last week. U.S.
- envoy Richard Burt joked about the danger of falling asleep due
- to jet lag, and his Soviet counterpart, Yuri Nazarkin, quipped
- that he had not yet mastered the jargon of arms control. Then,
- as talks progressed, Burt put forth a surprising proposal that
- threatened to sour the mood.
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- The U.S. insisted that unprecedented U.S. inspections of
- Soviet nuclear weaponry -- to test techniques for monitoring
- Moscow's compliance with the proposed START accord -- take
- place even before any such treaty is completed. Secretary of
- State James Baker defended the proposal, contending that an
- early understanding on verification might make an arms-reduction
- pact with the Soviets easier to sell to Congress.
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- The Soviets had no immediate response. But U.S. critics
- promptly charged that the Bush Administration was avoiding tough
- questions, like whether to scrap the Star Wars antimissile
- system, and deliberately delaying a START agreement. The
- Administration, warned Senator Joseph Biden, a member of the
- Foreign Relations Committee, may have committed a "major
- blunder."
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