SRES-323-119
Referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. (text: CR S4422)
Sponsored by Edward Markey (D-MA)
What it does
S. Res. 323 is a Senate resolution — a non-binding expression of the Senate's position — that would call on the President to lead a global effort to halt and reverse the nuclear arms race. It would urge the President to pursue arms control negotiations with Russia, China, and other nuclear-armed states; adopt a "no first use" nuclear policy; implement checks on the President's sole authority to launch nuclear weapons; end the "hair-trigger alert" posture; halt plans for new nuclear warheads and delivery systems; maintain the moratorium on nuclear testing; and support communities and workers affected by nuclear weapons programs.
Who benefits
Communities near nuclear weapons production and testing sites who could receive environmental remediation and health compensation. Workers in nuclear weapons facilities who could receive health monitoring and economic transition support. Downwinders and others harmed by past nuclear testing who could see expanded Radiation Exposure Compensation Act coverage. Broadly, all people who would benefit from reduced nuclear war risk. Countries in nuclear flashpoint regions (Taiwan Strait, Korean Peninsula, South Asia) that could benefit from reduced tensions.
Who is hurt
Defense contractors and their employees involved in nuclear weapons modernization programs, who could face reduced contracts if the President follows the resolution's guidance. Military personnel and civilian workers at nuclear weapons laboratories, production facilities, and bases whose jobs depend on modernization programs. Communities economically dependent on nuclear weapons infrastructure. Allies who rely on U.S. extended nuclear deterrence, who could perceive reduced U.S. commitment. The resolution is non-binding, so direct harm is limited unless the President acts on it.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the expiration of the New START treaty in February 2026 — the last remaining agreement limiting U.S. and Russian strategic nuclear arsenals — creates an urgent window for action before an unconstrained arms race accelerates. They contend that the CBO's estimate of $756 billion over 2023–2032 for nuclear modernization represents an unsustainable cost, and that scientific models show even a limited nuclear exchange could cause global famine affecting hundreds of millions. They further argue that both Republican and Democratic administrations have historically supported arms control, citing Reagan's own words that nuclear war "cannot be won and must never be fought."
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that unilateral steps toward disarmament — such as ending modernization plans or adopting a no-first-use policy — could undermine the credibility of U.S. nuclear deterrence at a moment when Russia has made explicit nuclear threats over Ukraine and China is rapidly expanding its arsenal. They contend that arms control agreements are only effective when adversaries comply in good faith, and that Russia's withdrawal from the INF Treaty and suspension of New START participation demonstrates the limits of treaty-based approaches. They further argue that the resolution's call to constrain the President's sole launch authority could slow response times in a genuine crisis.