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DATE=4/14/2000 TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT TITLE=START-TWO POLITICS NUMBER=5-46132 BYLINE=JIM RANDLE DATELINE=PENTAGON CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Arms control advocates in the United States are welcoming Friday's vote in the Russian parliament to ratify a long-delayed nuclear arms reduction treaty. But several experts on strategic issues say the tangled politics of arms control mean there are doubts whether the START-Two treaty will ever go into effect. V-O-A's Jim Randle reports from the Pentagon. TEXT: The lower house of Russia's parliament, the Duma, ratified the START-Two nuclear arms reduction treaty Friday, and the upper house is expected approve the pact soon. The U-S Senate ratified a version of the treaty in 1996, but Russian approval was delayed by Communist members of the Duma. The START-Two treaty would cut the number of nuclear warheads in each sides' arsenal to between three- thousand and three-thousand-500 over the next seven years. In Washington, the president of the Arms Control Association, Spurgeon Keeney, says the cuts are a step toward a safer world, and he is delighted by the Russian vote. The A-C-A is a private group that studies strategic issues and advocates reducing the number of nuclear weapons. He says the U-S Senate will take another look at the treaty because the version passed by Russia's Duma is different than the pact long-ago approved by the Senate. Mr. Keeney says it is not certain that the Senate will pass the modified bill because Republican majority opposes many arms control efforts. /// Keeney Act /// One has to remember that the Senate recently refused to ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, which was less controversial. /// End Act /// Mr. Keeney says there are several provisions passed by the Russians at the same time as the START-TWO vote that will annoy Senate Republicans. One says Moscow may back out of the arms reduction treaty if Washington backs out of another treaty that puts sharp limits on defenses against ballistic missiles. Heritage Foundation researcher Baker Spring says Senate Republicans will never give up on U-S missile defenses, but are likely to approve the new START treaty. /// Spring Act /// The question is what will the Russian Government do pursuant to the Duma's directions if the United States does not do a whole host of things that have nothing to do with START-Two ... /// End Act /// Mr. Spring says the result could be an arms reduction treaty signed by both sides that has no impact in the real world. At the height of the Cold War, the Soviet Union and the United States each fielded about 12-thousand nuclear warheads. Arms control efforts have already cut that number in half, and START-Two would bring another 50 per cent reduction. The two sides have held discussions on a proposed START-Three treaty that would cut another one thousand weapons on each side. That would leave perhaps 25-hundred atomic weapons in each of the two arsenals. One "small" nuclear bomb was enough to flatten the city of Hiroshima at the end of World War Two. Some newer weapons have many, many times the power of that early, crude, nuclear bombs. . (Signed) NEB/JR/JP 14-Apr-2000 17:46 PM EDT (14-Apr-2000 2146 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .