The Sentinel-Record

Top US and Russian diplomats discuss arms control, other issues

- VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

MOSCOW — U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov discussed arms control and other issues Friday as Moscow has signaled readiness to include some of its latest nuclear weapons in the last remaining arms control pact between the two countries if Washington accepts the Kremlin’s offer to extend it.

The State Department said the two top diplomats discussed the next steps in the bilateral strategic security dialogue. Pompeo emphasized that any future arms control talks must be based on U.S. President Donald Trump’s vision for a trilateral arms control agreement that includes China along with the U.S. and Russia, the State Department said.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has offered to extend the New START arms control treaty that expires in February 2021. The Trump administra­tion has pushed for a new pact that would include China as a signatory. Moscow has described that goal as unrealisti­c given Beijing’s reluctance to discuss any deal that would reduce its much smaller nuclear arsenal.

During Friday’s call with Pompeo, Lavrov reiterated Moscow’s offer to extend New START, saying that Russia is ready to discuss possible new agreements but considers it important to preserve the existing treaty as a “cornerston­e of global security,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said. It added that the top diplomats agreed to intensify the U.S.-Russian arms control dialogue.

Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said Friday that Russia’s new Sarmat heavy interconti­nental ballistic missile and the Avangard hypersonic glide vehicle could be counted along with other Russian nuclear weapons under the treaty.

The Sarmat is still under developmen­t, while the first missile unit armed with the Avangard became operationa­l in December.

The Russian military has said the Avangard is capable of flying 27 times faster than the speed of sound and could make sharp maneuvers on its way to a target to bypass missile defense systems. It has been fitted to the existing Soviet-built interconti­nental ballistic missiles instead of older type warheads, and in the future could be fitted to the more powerful Sarmat.

The New START Treaty, signed in 2010 by U.S. 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.

The treaty, which can be extended by another five years, envisages a comprehens­ive verificati­on mechanism to check compliance, including on-site inspection­s of each side’s nuclear bases.

New START is the only U.S.-Russia arms control pact still in effect after both Moscow and Washington withdrew from the 1987 Intermedia­te-range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty last year.

Arms control advocates have warned that its demise could trigger a new arms race and upset strategic stability.

Ryabkov said in an interview with the Mezhdunaro­dnaya Zhizn magazine that other prospectiv­e weapons announced by Putin in 2018 don’t fall under the pact’s provisions, but Russia is open for discussion on their possible inclusion as part of a wider dialogue about strategic stability.

Those weapons include the Burevestni­k nuclear-powered cruise missile and the atomic-powered and nuclear-armed Poseidon underwater drone described as capable of creating a tsunami to slam an enemy coastline.

Russia has cast the developmen­t of Avangard,

Burevestni­k and Poseidon as a response to U.S. missile defense, which it called a threat to its nuclear deterrent. It also has voiced concern about U.S. plans to deploy weapons in space.

During Friday’s call with Pompeo, Lavrov emphasized that the arms control dialogue should “include all factors that impact strategic stability,” a reference to those Russian concerns.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Maria

Zakharova rejected a statement from Gen. John Raymond, commander of U.S. Space Command, who said earlier this week that Russia’s test of an anti-satellite missile was an indication of a growing threat to the U.S. and allied space systems. Zakharova charged that Raymond’s statement was intended to justify Washington’s own plans to develop space weapons and invited the U.S. to discuss an agreement that would ban space-based weapons.

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