The expiration of the New START treaty on February 5, 2026, without a successor agreement has left U.S.-Russia nuclear arms control in limbo, driving low trader consensus for a near-term deal amid ongoing Ukraine conflict tensions and mutual suspension of verification measures. President Trump rejected Russia's proposed one-year extension, pushing instead for a modernized multilateral framework potentially including China, as echoed by Senator Rubio in early March. No bilateral talks have advanced publicly since, with recent U.S. briefings to allies emphasizing stalled Russia-Ukraine negotiations and temporary sanctions relief on Russian oil. Upcoming Ukraine peace summits or diplomatic breakthroughs could catalyze progress, though structural barriers like warhead limits and verification remain unresolved.
Resumo experimental gerado por IA com dados do Polymarket · AtualizadoAcordo nuclear EUA x Rússia por...?
Acordo nuclear EUA x Rússia por...?
$582,051 Vol.
30 de junho
11%
$582,051 Vol.
30 de junho
11%
Only agreements that are publicly announced and acknowledged by both the U.S. and Russia will qualify. The agreement must pertain to nuclear arms control or limitation—such as a treaty, framework, or memorandum—addressing matters including (but not limited to) nuclear warheads, delivery systems, verification mechanisms, or strategic stability.
An extension, amendment, or replacement of the New START treaty will qualify, provided it is publicly announced as a concluded agreement by both parties within the time frame. Exploratory discussions or stated intent to extend without a finalized agreement will not qualify.
Agreements that include both the United States and Russia as named parties—whether bilateral or as part of a broader multilateral framework—will qualify, provided the agreement directly addresses nuclear arms control.
The agreement does not need to be ratified or implemented for this market to resolve "Yes"; a formal announcement of a concluded agreement is sufficient.
The primary resolution source for this market will be official statements from the U.S. government (e.g., the White House, State Department) and/or the Russian Federation (e.g., the Kremlin, Ministry of Foreign Affairs). However, a clear and overwhelming consensus of credible reporting confirming that such an agreement has been reached will also qualify.
Mercado Aberto: Dec 10, 2025, 7:05 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Only agreements that are publicly announced and acknowledged by both the U.S. and Russia will qualify. The agreement must pertain to nuclear arms control or limitation—such as a treaty, framework, or memorandum—addressing matters including (but not limited to) nuclear warheads, delivery systems, verification mechanisms, or strategic stability.
An extension, amendment, or replacement of the New START treaty will qualify, provided it is publicly announced as a concluded agreement by both parties within the time frame. Exploratory discussions or stated intent to extend without a finalized agreement will not qualify.
Agreements that include both the United States and Russia as named parties—whether bilateral or as part of a broader multilateral framework—will qualify, provided the agreement directly addresses nuclear arms control.
The agreement does not need to be ratified or implemented for this market to resolve "Yes"; a formal announcement of a concluded agreement is sufficient.
The primary resolution source for this market will be official statements from the U.S. government (e.g., the White House, State Department) and/or the Russian Federation (e.g., the Kremlin, Ministry of Foreign Affairs). However, a clear and overwhelming consensus of credible reporting confirming that such an agreement has been reached will also qualify.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...The expiration of the New START treaty on February 5, 2026, without a successor agreement has left U.S.-Russia nuclear arms control in limbo, driving low trader consensus for a near-term deal amid ongoing Ukraine conflict tensions and mutual suspension of verification measures. President Trump rejected Russia's proposed one-year extension, pushing instead for a modernized multilateral framework potentially including China, as echoed by Senator Rubio in early March. No bilateral talks have advanced publicly since, with recent U.S. briefings to allies emphasizing stalled Russia-Ukraine negotiations and temporary sanctions relief on Russian oil. Upcoming Ukraine peace summits or diplomatic breakthroughs could catalyze progress, though structural barriers like warhead limits and verification remain unresolved.
Resumo experimental gerado por IA com dados do Polymarket · Atualizado
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