The Arms Reduction, also known as the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START), is a treaty to reduce and limit the strategic offensive arms.
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaties (SART)
The acronym START means the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty. Following the end of the Cold War in 1990, the US and Russia both agreed that they should reduce the number of nuclear weapons in their arsenals. This resulted in a couple of treaties. START II was the second.
If you mean coat of arms, you will have to get invovled with geneology. Not every name has a coat of arms.
Arms were registered so that no two people would have the same arms.
Men at arms. The word 'arms' is a mass noun - and is already plural.
arms reduction, demobilization, arms limitation, demilitarization
Getting rid of weapons.
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START)
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty
Lynn Rusten has written: 'The Soviet position in the strategic arms reduction talks (START) and Soviet reaction to the U.S. START proposals' -- subject(s): Military relations, Nuclear arms control, Strategic Arms Reduction Talks, Strategic forces
" START "(Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty).
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START I), signed in 1991
Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT)
arms reduction
arms reduction
no, sorry. I recently had a breast reduction, and my underarm flab is definitely still there. From what I understand, that can only be gotten rid of by doing excercises to tone your arms.
Amy F Woolf has written: 'Nuclear arms control' -- subject(s): Military policy, Nuclear arms control, Nuclear weapons 'START' -- subject(s): Foreign relations, Nuclear arms control, Strategic Arms Reduction Talks 'Nuclear weapons in the U.S. force structure' -- subject(s): Nuclear weapons, Nuclear disarmament 'Nuclear weapons in Russia' -- subject(s): Nuclear arms control, Nuclear weapons 'START' -- subject(s): Foreign relations, Nuclear arms control, Strategic Arms Reduction Talks 'Nonproliferation & threat reduction assistance' -- subject(s): American Technical assistance, Arms control, Nuclear nonproliferation, Weapons of mass destruction 'Nuclear weapons after the Cold War' -- subject(s): Nuclear weapons, Nuclear disarmament, Military policy