| United States - 1986 - 486 pages
...appear unwilling to repair. Therefore, in the future, the United States will base decisions regarding its strategic forces on the nature and magnitude of the threat posed by the Soviet Union, rather than on standards contained in expired SALT agreements unilaterally observed... | |
| United States. Organization of the Joint Chiefs of Staff - United States - 112 pages
...Geneva. On 27 May 1986, the President announced that the United States must base decisions on future strategic forces on the nature and magnitude of the threat posed by Soviet strategic forces and not on standards contained in the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT) structure which had been... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Armed Services - 1986 - 1064 pages
...appear unwilling to repair. Therefore, in the future, the United States will base decisions regarding its strategic forces on the nature and magnitude of the threat posed by the Soviet Union, rather than on standards contained in the expired SALT agreements unilaterally observed... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Armed Services - 1986 - 656 pages
...decided that in the future, the United States must base decisions regarding its strategic force structure on the nature and magnitude of the threat posed by Soviet strategic forces and not on standards contained in the SALT structure, especially in a flawed SALT II Treaty which was... | |
| United States. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency - Arms control - 1986 - 934 pages
...which the US is not a party. US decisions regarding strategic offensive force structure are now based on the nature and magnitude of the threat posed by Soviet strategic forces and not on the standards contained in the SALT I Interim Agreement and SALT II Treaty. The President's... | |
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