The US has urged three-way talks with Russia and China to set new limits on nuclear weapons after the last treaty between Washington and Moscow expired.

Thomas DiNanno, the US Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security, told the UN Conference on Disarmament today that the New START treaty, which was allowed to lapse yesterday, had “fundamental flaws”.

“Serial Russian violations, growth of more worldwide stockpiles and flaws in New START’s design and implementation gives the United States a clear imperative to call for a new architecture that addresses the threats of today, not those of a bygone era,” he told the conference at the UN’s European headquarters in Geneva.

“As we sit here today, China’s entire nuclear arsenal has no limits, no transparency, no declarations, and no controls,” he lamented.

He added: “The next era of arms control can and should continue with clear focus but it will require the participation of more than just Russia at the negotiating table.”

The expiration of New START, which restricted the US and Russia to deploying 1,550 nuclear warheads each, marks the first time in decades that the world finds itself without a treaty to curb the positioning of the planet’s most destructive weapons, sparking fears of a fresh arms race.

US President Donald Trump did not accept a proposal from Russian President Vladimir Putin to keep New START’s restrictions in place for another year and yesterday called for a “new, improved and modernised treaty”.

DiNanno stated: “New START does not allow the United States to credibly uphold both our strategic deterrence commitments to the American people and our extended deterrence commitments to our allies.

“We aim to improve upon New START in order to achieve a new, better strategic stability and arms control architecture that makes the world safer and more secure,” he said.

China has already publicly rejected joining disarmament negotiations, noting that its arsenal is much smaller, although it is rapidly growing.

China’s ambassador Shen Jian reiterated that position today, insisting to the disarmament body that, “China’s nuclear capabilities are nowhere near the level of those of the US or Russia.

“China would not participate in nuclear disarmament negotiations at this stage,” he said.

Russia’s ambassador Gennady Gatilov, meanwhile, insisted that any new nuclear talks should also include other nuclear-armed states such as France and Britain.

Russia “would be involved in such a process if the United Kingdom and France are also involved, who are military allies of the United States in NATO, which has declared itself a nuclear alliance”, he told the conference.