Penticton Herald

Trump suspends arms treaty to focus on China, Russia threats

- By The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion is pulling the plug on a decades-old nuclear arms treaty with Russia, lifting what it sees as unreasonab­le constraint­s on competing with a resurgent Russia and a more assertive China. The move announced Friday sets the stage for delicate talks with U.S. allies over potential new American missile deployment­s.

In explaining his decision, which he had foreshadow­ed months ago, President Donald Trump accused Moscow of violating the 1987 Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces treaty with “impunity” by deploying banned missiles.

Moscow denies it is in violation and has accused Washington of resisting its efforts to resolve the dispute.

Democrats in Congress and arms control advocates criticized Trump’s decision as opening the door to an arms race.

“The U.S. threat to terminate the treaty will not bring Russia back into compliance and could unleash a dangerous and costly new missile competitio­n between the United States and Russia in Europe and beyond,” said the private Arms Control Associatio­n. It argued that Washington had not exhausted options for drawing Russia back into compliance.

Trump said in a statement that the U.S. will “move forward” with developing its own military response options to Russia’s banned deployment of cruise missiles that could target western Europe.

“We cannot be the only country in the world unilateral­ly bound by this treaty, or any other,” Trump said.

Other officials said the treaty could still be saved if Russia reverses course and returns to compliance, but that window of opportunit­y will close in six months when the American withdrawal is due to take effect.

The Trump decision reflects his administra­tion’s view that the arms treaty was an unacceptab­le obstacle to more forcefully confrontin­g not only Russia but also China.

China’s military has grown mightily since the treaty was signed, and the pact has prevented the U.S. from deploying weapons to counter some of those being developed in Beijing.

Leaving the INF pact risks aggravatin­g relations with European allies, who share the view that Russia is violating the treaty but have not endorsed a U.S. withdrawal.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, speaking to reporters after Trump’s statement, said Russia will be formally notified today that the U.S. is withdrawin­g from the treaty, effective in six months.

In the meantime, starting today, the U.S. will suspend its obligation­s under the treaty.

Pompeo said that if, in the coming six months, Russia accepts U.S. demands that it verifiably destroy the cruise missiles that Washington claims are a violation, then the treaty can be saved. If it does not, “the treaty terminates,” he said.

Administra­tion officials have dismissed concerns that the treaty’s demise could trigger a race to develop and deploy more intermedia­te-range missiles.

U.S. officials have emphasized their fear that China, which is not party to the treaty, is gaining a significan­t military advantage in Asia by deploying large numbers of missiles with ranges beyond the treaty’s limit.

Whether the U.S. will now respond by deploying INF noncomplia­nt missiles in

Asia is unclear.

In any case, it seems unlikely Beijing would agree to any negotiated limits on its weaponry.

Russia accused the U.S. of unilateral­ly seeking to neuter the treaty.

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

INF was the first arms control measure to ban an entire class of weapons: groundlaun­ched cruise missiles with a range between 500 kilometres and 5,500 kilometres. At the time, in the late stages of the Cold War, the U.S. and its allies were mainly concerned by the perceived threat of Russian mediumrang­e nuclear missiles that were targeted at Europe. The U.S. deployed similar missiles in response, in the 1980s, leading to negotiatio­ns that produced the INF treaty.

Rep. Adam Smith, a Washington state Democrat and new chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, blasted Trump for raising the risk of nuclear war.

“We have provided Russia an ample window of time to mend its way. Tomorrow that time runs out,” Pompeo said Friday.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with Chinese Vice Premier Liu He in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Thursday.
The Associated Press President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with Chinese Vice Premier Liu He in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Thursday.

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