Orlando Sentinel

Biden hopes to extend Russia pact

Proposal comes with New START treaty set to expire Feb. 5

- By Matthew Lee and Robert Burns

President has proposed a five-year extension of a nuclear arms treaty set to expire in February.

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden has proposed to Russia a five-year extension of a nuclear arms treaty that is set to expire in February, the White House said Thursday.

Biden proposed the extension even as he asked the intelligen­ce community to look closely into Russia’s cyberattac­ks, its alleged interferen­ce in the 2020 election and other actions, press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters.

Russia has said for some time that it would welcome an extension of New START, which limits the number of U.S. and Russian strategic nuclear weapons.

The Trump administra­tion made a late bid to extend the treaty, but its conditions were rejected by Russia.

U.S. allies, particular­ly in Europe, are sure to applaud Biden’s proposal, which also provides an early signal of his intent to pursue arms control.

Psaki noted that a fiveyear extension is permitted by the treaty and it “makes even more sense when the relationsh­ip with Russia is adversaria­l as it is at this time.”

She called the treaty, which is the last remaining arms control pact between Washington and Moscow since the Trump administra­tion withdrew from two others, “an anchor of strategic stability between our two countries.”

Despite the proposal, Psaki said Biden was committed to holding Russia “to account for its reckless and adversaria­l actions,” such as its alleged involvemen­t in the SolarWinds hacking event, the chemical poisoning of opposition figure Alexei Navalny and the widely reported allegation­s that Russia may have offered bounties to the Taliban to kill American soldiers in Afghanista­n.

Biden’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, was to convey the extension proposal to Russia’s ambassador to the U.S., Anatoly Antonov, Thursday afternoon, according to one official familiar with the matter, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private diplomatic conversati­ons.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g earlier Thursday called on the

United States and Russia to extend the treaty and to later broaden it.

“We should not end up in a situation with no limitation on nuclear warheads, and New START will expire within days,” Stoltenber­g told reporters in Brussels. The treaty expires Feb. 5.

Stoltenber­g underlined that “an extension of the New START is not the end, it’s the beginning of our efforts to further strengthen arms control.”

The treaty, signed in 2010 by President Barack Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, limits each country to no more than 1,550 deployed nuclear warheads and 700 deployed missiles and bombers. It permits sweeping on-site inspection­s to verify compliance.

Obama won Senate ratificati­on of the treaty with a commitment to move ahead with a vast and enormously expensive recapitali­zation of the U.S. nuclear force. That program, which some Democrats in Congress call excessive, is likely to be further scrutinize­d by the Biden administra­tion. At a projected cost exceeding $1 trillion over the next several decades, the plan is to replace each of the three “legs” of the U.S. nuclear triad — ballistic missile

submarines, nuclear-capable bomber aircraft and land-based nuclear missiles.

President Donald Trump had been highly critical of New START, asserting that it put the United States at a disadvanta­ge. His administra­tion waited until last year to engage Russia in substantiv­e talks on the treaty’s future. Trump insisted that China be added to the treaty, but Beijing rejected the idea out of hand.

Trump’s lead negotiator on New START discussion­s with the Russians, Marshall Billingsle­a, wrote on Twitter on Thursday that Biden would be making a mistake by quickly agreeing to a fiveyear extension.

“Hope this is not true,” he wrote, referring to news reports of Thursday’s proposal. “If so, shows stunning lack of negotiatin­g skill. Took just 24 hours for Biden team to squander most significan­t leverage we have over Russia.”

Robert Soofer, who was the Trump administra­tion’s top nuclear policy official at the Pentagon, said in an interview that he sees the Biden decision to accept a five-year extension as a lost opportunit­y. “The Russians are likely to pocket this extension and walk away from the table,” Soofer said, rather than accede to a long-standing U.S. request that they negotiate limits on

other categories of nuclear weapons, such as tactical weapons.

Some U.S. officials have been leery of renewing New START without getting a Russian commitment to negotiate limits on new types of strategic weapons, including Moscow’s nuclear-capable Avangard hypersonic long-range missile.

Biden, who indicated during the campaign that he favored extending New START, is not proposing any alteration­s, the U.S. official said. Thus it appeared likely that Moscow would be amenable to an extension.

The proposal was reported first by The Washington Post.

 ?? ALEXEI DRUZHININ/SPUTNIK 2020 ?? President Biden is looking to extend an arms pact with Russia. Above, Russian President Vladimir Putin at a meeting with his Security Council.
ALEXEI DRUZHININ/SPUTNIK 2020 President Biden is looking to extend an arms pact with Russia. Above, Russian President Vladimir Putin at a meeting with his Security Council.

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