Russia suspended its participation in New START nuclear arms inspections in February 2023 amid the Ukraine invasion, halting the last major U.S.-Russia arms control treaty and expiring in February 2026 without extension talks. Recent U.S. diplomatic overtures, including July 2024 State Department calls for Moscow to resume compliance, have gone unanswered, as Kremlin officials demand concessions on sanctions, NATO expansion, and Ukraine aid first. No bilateral summits or negotiations have materialized in the past 30 days, reflecting deep mutual distrust and escalation risks from Russia's nuclear rhetoric. Post-U.S. election dynamics under incoming President Trump, with his past rapport with Putin, could prompt informal diplomacy, but formal treaty progress faces steep barriers before any market deadline. Traders monitor State Department announcements and potential backchannel talks.
基于Polymarket数据的AI实验性摘要 · 更新于$581,733 交易量
June 30
14%
$581,733 交易量
June 30
14%
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.
市场开放时间: 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...Russia suspended its participation in New START nuclear arms inspections in February 2023 amid the Ukraine invasion, halting the last major U.S.-Russia arms control treaty and expiring in February 2026 without extension talks. Recent U.S. diplomatic overtures, including July 2024 State Department calls for Moscow to resume compliance, have gone unanswered, as Kremlin officials demand concessions on sanctions, NATO expansion, and Ukraine aid first. No bilateral summits or negotiations have materialized in the past 30 days, reflecting deep mutual distrust and escalation risks from Russia's nuclear rhetoric. Post-U.S. election dynamics under incoming President Trump, with his past rapport with Putin, could prompt informal diplomacy, but formal treaty progress faces steep barriers before any market deadline. Traders monitor State Department announcements and potential backchannel talks.
基于Polymarket数据的AI实验性摘要 · 更新于
警惕外部链接哦。
警惕外部链接哦。
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