China Daily (Hong Kong)

INF arms treaty faces collapse as talks fail

- 60 day deadline

The survival of a key nuclear arms control treaty was cast further into doubt on Tuesday after the United States and Russia blamed each other for pushing the agreement to the brink of collapse.

Senior diplomats from both countries met in Geneva amid widespread concern over the fate of the bilateral Intermedia­te Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, which successful­ly put an end to a mini-arms race after it was signed in 1987.

The 1987 pact bans both sides from production, testing and deployment of land-based cruise and ballistic missiles with a range between 500 and 5500 kilometers.

US President Donald Trump said in October that his country would pull out of the deal unless Russia stopped violating it.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has threatened to develop nuclear missiles banned under the treaty if it is scrapped.

US ‘fully’ to blame

Russia hosted the negotiatio­ns at its mission in Geneva and Moscow’s delegation was led by Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov.

Ryabkov said that if the deal is ditched, “responsibi­lity for this fully and completely rests with the American side”, according to quotes published by Russian news agencies after the talks.

He added that the parties had failed to agree on anything and Washington did not appear to be in the mood for more negotiatio­ns.

“We are forced to acknowledg­e that there is no movement forward,” Ryabkov was quoted as saying.

“We are ready for dialogue on the basis of equality, mutual respect, (and) without putting forward ultimatums.”

However, US Under Secretary for Arms Control and Internatio­nal Security, Andrea Thompson, said in a statement: “The meeting was disappoint­ing as it is clear Russia continues to be in material breach of the treaty and did not come prepared to explain how it plans to return to full and verifiable compliance.

“Our message was clear: Russia must destroy its noncomplia­nt missile system,” she said.

Thompson will be in Brussels on Wednesday, where she plans to brief NATO allies on the INF talks.

Last month, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Washington would withdraw within 60 days from the Cold War treaty limiting mid-range nuclear arms if Russia does not dismantle missiles that the US claims breach the deal, which include Russia’s 9M729 system, also known by the designatio­n SSC-8.

Ryabkov said Washington confirmed its intention to exit the treaty on Feb 2. He said Russia proposed holding another round of talks on the agreement but got no reply from the US side.

The INF was a bilateral treaty between the US and the then Soviet Union, so it puts no restrictio­ns on other major military actors.

Pompeo has also said the US was not prepared to cede this advantage to a rival and noted that US concerns about Russian compliance pre-date the Trump government.

Washington’s top diplomat has accused Russia of shrugging off dozens of warnings from senior US officials over the past five years about the SSC-8.

Ryabkov said Tuesday’s talks in Geneva centered on SSC-8 system but that US demands regarding the missile were unacceptab­le.

NATO chief Jens Stoltenber­g has described the INF as “arms control at its best” but warned last month that the collapse of the agreement appeared likely.

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