Oman Daily Observer

Nato demands answers on Russia missiles

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BRUSSELS: Nato chief Jens Stoltenber­g on Wednesday demanded Moscow prove it is complying with a landmark Cold War nuclear arms reduction treaty, as concerns grow over a new Russian missile system.

Washington has complained for nearly two years that a groundlaun­ched missile system deployed by Russia breaches the 1987 Intermedia­te Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF).

Nato defence ministers will discuss the issue at a two-day meeting in Brussels, after the alliance’s July summit declaratio­n said the Russian 9M729 missile system raised “serious concerns”.

Stoltenber­g said the 1987 accord signed by US president Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev remained a “cornerston­e of European security”.

“We are very serious about our concerns and very serious when we call on Russia to comply with the INF treaty in a transparen­t and verifiable way,” Stoltenber­g said, adding that Moscow had long denied the missile even existed.

“Now they have admitted the missile exists and therefore we have called on them to answer our questions. As long as they don’t answer our questions, the most plausible solution is that this is a violation of the INF treaty.”

Nato leaders raised concerns about the Russian 9M729 missile system and urged Moscow to engage in dialogue to ensure the future of the INF treaty, which abolished a whole class of missiles with a range of between 500 and 5,500 kilometres.

It put an end to a mini-arms race in the 1980s triggered by the Soviet Union’s deployment of SS-20 nuclear missiles targeting Western European capitals.

Moscow has repeatedly insisted it is not in breach of the treaty, but its denials have cut little ice in Western capitals.

US Defence Secretary James Mattis said in February that the Pentagon was working on new low-yield nuclear weapons to respond to the Russian move in a bid to force them back into compliance with the INF.

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