Manila Bulletin

US, Russia arms talks start with little hope of accord

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VIENNA, Austria (AFP) — The United States and Russia meet Monday in Vienna for talks on their last major nuclear weapons agreement against a backdrop of growing tensions and difference­s over whether they see any value in arms control at all.

US President Donald Trump insists that China should be involved in the talks on New START, the treaty that caps US and Russian nuclear warheads, because he says up until now Beijing has had a free pass to do as it likes in developing its weapon systems.

China has shown no sign of being interested, giving Washington fresh cause for complaint, although critics say Washington finds that a useful stick with which to beat its growing rival.

Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Washington-based Arms Control Associatio­n, said the insistence on including China showed the Trump administra­tion was not serious about an accord.

“The only conclusion I can come to is that... the Trump administra­tion (does) not intend to extend New START and is seeking to display China’s disinteres­t in trilateral arms control talks as a cynical excuse to allow New START to expire,” Kimball said.

Trump has already scrapped several treaties with Russia — on overflight­s and on intermedia­te-range nuclear forces.

US ambassador Marshall Billingsle­a and Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov are nonetheles­s to discuss the future of the New START treaty, which was agreed in 2010 and expires in February, 2021.

Speaking over the weekend, Ryabkov played down prospects when he said that while it would be “correct and logical” to agree an extension, the future of the world was not solely dependent on it.

The deadlock over New START and the demise of other nuclear arms control treaties “suggest that the era of bilateral nuclear arms control agreements between Russia and the USA might be coming to an end,” said Shannon Kile of the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute.

According to the institute’s latest research, Russia has 6,375 nuclear warheads, including those that are not deployed, and the United States has 5,800.

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