San Diego Union-Tribune

U.S.: RUSSIA NOT COMPLYING WITH NUKE PACT

State Dept. says weapons inspectors being denied access

- BY EDWARD WONG Wong writes for The New York Times.

The State Department told Congress on Tuesday that Russia was not complying with the only nuclear arms control treaty remaining between the two nations, jeopardizi­ng a source of stability in their relationsh­ip.

The agency said Russia had refused to allow American inspectors into nuclear weapons facilities, an obligation under the treaty known as New START, which was renewed for five years in February 2021.

“Russia’s refusal to facilitate inspection activities prevents the United States from exercising important rights under the treaty and threatens the viability of U.S.-Russian nuclear arms control,” the State Department said in a statement on Tuesday.

It added that “Russia has also failed to comply with the New START treaty obligation to convene a session of the bilateral consultati­ve commission in accordance with the treaty-mandated timeline.”

The State Department called on Russia to return to compliance by allowing inspectors onto its territory, as it had done for more than a decade, and by agreeing to hold a session of the commission, in which officials could discuss issues related to the treaty and nuclear arms control.

Russia announced in August that it was suspending the access of American inspectors to its nuclear arsenal. And in November, it canceled a diplomatic meeting of the bilateral commission in Cairo during which officials had planned to review compliance with the treaty. The commission last met in October 2021.

Russia’s deputy foreign minister, Sergei Ryabkov, said Moscow was postponing the meeting because the United States “did not want to take into account Russia’s priorities, they wanted to discuss only the resumption of inspection­s,” the staterun RIA Novosti news agency reported.

“The situation around Ukraine also had an impact,” the agency quoted Ryabkov as saying.

After Russia’s announceme­nt on inspection­s in August, Ned Price, a State Department spokespers­on, said the two nations “have

continued to provide data declaratio­ns and notificati­ons in accordance with the treaty.”

The treaty was signed in 2010, and it has ensured since 2011 that the two nations limit their strategic nuclear arsenals to 1,500 warheads each. The main verificati­on mechanism of the treaty centers on reciprocal inspection­s in which each country can examine data and evidence around the nuclear arsenal.

When Russia suspended inspection­s, it said that U.S. sanctions imposed on Russia after it invaded Ukraine made it too difficult for its inspectors to get access to the United States. The State Department said that was false.

After the pandemic began in March 2020, the two sides suspended inspection­s, and U.S. officials have been saying they hope to get the practice back on a regular schedule.

The New START agreement was set to expire on

Feb. 5, 2021, but the two government­s announced a fiveyear extension two days before that deadline. The fullscale invasion of Ukraine in February last year by the Russian military under the command of President Vladimir Putin makes any further negotiatio­ns over arms control difficult. Since the war began, President Joe Biden has put on hold any diplomatic discussion­s over new arms control treaties.

Jeffrey Lewis, a nuclear nonprolife­ration expert at the Middlebury Institute of Internatio­nal Studies, said the deteriorat­ion of New START was troubling and did not bode well for renewal prospects in 2026.

“Things look very grim right now,” he said. Although “the treaty is strongly in both parties’ interests,” he added, “the Russians seem to be allowing what’s going on in Ukraine to spill across all policies.”

“I think an unconstrai­ned arms race between Russia and the United States is not in either of our interests, and that is what will happen,” Lewis said.

New START does not cover the use of tactical nuclear weapons. U.S. and European officials have debated whether Putin might use such a weapon in Ukraine. That possibilit­y was intensely discussed last fall in Washington and other European capitals because of specific data from intelligen­ce agencies, but talk of it among officials has since quieted down.

 ?? RUSSIAN DEFENSE MINISTRY PRESS SERVICE VIA AP ?? A Yars interconti­nental ballistic missile is test-fired as part of Russian nuclear drills in October.
RUSSIAN DEFENSE MINISTRY PRESS SERVICE VIA AP A Yars interconti­nental ballistic missile is test-fired as part of Russian nuclear drills in October.

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