Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Russia questions U.S. compliance with key nuke accord

- By Vladimir Isachenkov

MOSCOW » Russia challenged U.S. compliance with a key nuclear arms control treaty on Monday and warned that the Trump administra­tion’s new nuclear strategy lowers the threshold for using atomic weapons.

The dire assessment came as Moscow said it has met its own requiremen­ts under the New START agreement that was signed in 2010 and entered into force a year later. It restricts both the U.S. and Russia to 1,550 deployed strategic nuclear warheads on a maximum of 700 deployed interconti­nental ballistic missiles and strategic bombers. The deadline to verify both countries’ compliance was Monday.

The Russian Foreign Ministry said it now has 527 deployed interconti­nental ballistic missiles and strategic bombers. It gave a tally of 1,444 strategic nuclear warheads. The U.S. reported it has been in compliance with the limits since August.

Russia acknowledg­ed the U.S. position on meeting the targets, but voiced concern about the U.S. reconfigur­ing some submarines and bombers to carry convention­al weapons. The Foreign Ministry said it doesn’t have a way to confirm the reconfigur­ed hardware was rendered incapable of carrying nuclear weapons.

Washington also “arbitraril­y converted” some undergroun­d missile launch sites into training facilities, which wasn’t spelled out in the treaty, the ministry said. It urged the U.S. work with Russia to resolve such matters.

The U.S. State Department insisted America was fully adhering to the deal.

“To meet the central limits of the treaty, the United States developed and utilized conversion procedures in full compliance with its treaty obligation­s,” it said, adding it would cooperate with Russia to “address technical questions and issues related to the ongoing implementa­tion of New START.”

Russia-U.S. ties have been miserable for several years, but nuclear weapons reduction has been a strong point. The former Cold War foes have clashed most notably over Russia’s conduct in Ukraine, the Syrian civil war and allegation­s Moscow meddled in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election. The Trump administra­tion’s pivot to a new nuclear strategy could now affect arms control cooperatio­n.

Last week, the Trump administra­tion announced it would continue much of President Barack Obama’s nuclear policy, while adopting a more aggressive stance toward Russia. Russia must be convinced it would face “unacceptab­ly dire costs” for threatenin­g even a limited nuclear attack in Europe, the new policy states.

The Pentagon-led review made clear the administra­tion’s view that Russian policies and actions are fraught with potential for miscalcula­tion that could lead to an uncontroll­ed escalation of conflict in Europe.

It specifical­ly pointed to a Russian doctrine known as “escalate to de-escalate,” in which Moscow would use or threaten to use smalleryie­ld nuclear weapons in a limited, convention­al conflict in Europe to compel the U.S. and NATO to back down. Consequent­ly, the review said the U.S. would modify “a small number” of existing long-range ballistic missiles carried by Trident strategic submarines to fit them with smaller-yield nuclear warheads.

Russia slammed the U.S. report, saying it was founded on false assumption­s about Moscow’s intentions and contained worrying modernizat­ion plans.

The U.S. Nuclear Posture Review puts “in question our right to defend ourselves against an aggression that threatens the country’s survival,” the Foreign Ministry said in a weekend statement. “We would like to hope that Washington is aware of the high level of danger when such doctrinal provisions move to the level of practical military planning.”

The ministry said Russia’s military doctrine envisages the use of nuclear weapons to deter an aggression that threatens “the very existence of our state.” It said Washington, however, took a no-limits approach that could mean using nuclear weapons in “extreme circumstan­ces” beyond defense against military operations.

“Even military scenarios are presented so ambiguousl­y that it seems like the U.S. planners may view practicall­y any use of military capability as a reason for delivering a nuclear strike against anyone they consider an ‘aggressor,’” the ministry said.

It said U.S. plans to develop new low-yield nuclear weapons “will greatly increase the temptation of using them, especially considerin­g the right to a disarming first strike as set out in the new U.S. doctrine.”

“Assurances that the implementa­tion of these plans will not lower the nuclear threshold can at least be interprete­d as a desire to delude the internatio­nal community,” the ministry said.

“It is even more frightenin­g that the U.S. military and other national security profession­als firmly believe in their ability to model conflict scenarios that involve low-yield nuclear options. Quite to the contrary, we believe that this dramatic lowering of the threshold conditions can provoke a nuclear missile war even in a low-intensity conflict.”

 ?? MATT YORK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The 39th and final B-52G Stratofort­ress, tail number 58-0224, accountabl­e under the New START Treaty (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty) with Russia, is shown at the 309th Aerospace Maintenanc­e and Regenerati­on Group boneyard at Davis-Monthan Air Force...
MATT YORK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The 39th and final B-52G Stratofort­ress, tail number 58-0224, accountabl­e under the New START Treaty (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty) with Russia, is shown at the 309th Aerospace Maintenanc­e and Regenerati­on Group boneyard at Davis-Monthan Air Force...

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