Montreal Gazette

U.S. SAYS IT WILL PULL OUT OF LANDMARK NUCLEAR PACT, ASSERTING THAT THE RUSSIANS HAVE BEEN VIOLATING IT FOR YEARS. THE MOVE COULD SERVE RUSSIA’S STRATEGIC INTERESTS BUT IT HAS UPSET NATO.

Decision ignites Cold War rhetoric

- JIM HEINTZ

MOSCOW • Russian politician­s accused the United States on Friday of underminin­g global security by ending compliance with a nuclear arms treaty, while NATO said Russia was at fault for the pact’s demise and European countries watched with dismay.

The U.S. announced it would stop observing the Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces treaty as of Saturday and would withdraw within six months from the pact, a cornerston­e of internatio­nal security since 1987.

The treaty signed by the United States and the Soviet Union bans the developmen­t, deployment and testing of land-based nuclear weapons with a range of 500 to 5,500 kilometres. Moscow and Washington have for years traded claims of the other party being in violation.

Before Friday’s announceme­nt, the United States alleged that a new Russian missile breached the treaty. Russia in turn accused the United States of unilateral­ly seeking to neuter the agreement and of resisting Russian attempts to resolve the dispute.

“I ‘congratula­te’ the whole world; the United States has taken another step toward its destructio­n today,” Konstantin Kosachev, head of the foreign affairs committee in the upper house of Russia’s parliament, said.

Another Russian senator, Igor Morozov, alleged the move “carries a threat to the entire system of internatio­nal security, but first of all for Russia, because after leaving the INF the Americans will deploy these missiles in European countries,”

However, the end of the treaty could also serve Russia’s strategic interests, removing any obstacle to Moscow deploying intermedia­te-range missiles that could reach Europe and China.

U. S. officials had expressed worry that China was gaining a significan­t military advantage in Asia by deploying large numbers of missiles with ranges beyond the treaty’s limit. Leaving the treaty with Russia would allow the United States to counter the Chinese, but it’s unclear how the Pentagon might try to do that.

Washington’s decision was received with anxiety in Europe despite an assertion by the head of NATO that Russia has been in violation of the treaty for several years.

“All NATO allies support the U.S. decision today to start the withdrawal process, but it will take six months before that process is completed,” said NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g. “We continue, therefore, to call on Russia to come back into compliance and fully respect the INF Treaty.”

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