Cyprus Today

US pulls out of ’87 Russia nuclear pact

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THE United States formally withdrew from a landmark nuclear missile pact with Russia yesterday after determinin­g that Moscow was in violation of the treaty, something the Kremlin has repeatedly denied.

Washington signalled it would pull out of the arms control treaty six months ago unless Moscow stuck to the accord, but Russia said that was a ploy to exit a treaty it said the United States wanted to leave anyway in order to develop new missiles.

The 1987 Intermedia­te-range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) was negotiated by then-US president Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. It banned both sides from stationing in Europe land-based missiles with a range of between 310 and 3,400 miles, reducing their ability to launch a nuclear strike at short notice.

“The United States will not remain party to a treaty that is deliberate­ly violated by Russia,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a statement about the US withdrawal.

“Russia’s non-compliance under the treaty jeopardise­s US supreme interests as Russia’s developmen­t and fielding of a treaty-violating missile system represents a direct threat to the United States and our allies and partners,” Pompeo said.

Senior administra­tion officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Russia had deployed “multiple battalions” of a Russian cruise missile throughout Russia in violation of the pact, including in western Russia, “with the ability to strike critical European targets”.

Russia denies the allegation, saying the missile’s range puts it outside the treaty. It has also rejected a US demand to destroy the new missile, the Novator 9M729, which is known as the SSC-8 by the North Atlantic Treaty Organisati­on.

Moscow has told Washington its decision to quit the pact undermines global security and removes a key pillar of internatio­nal arms control.

Yesterday Russia said it had asked the United States for a moratorium on the deployment of short and intermedia­te-range nuclear missiles in Europe.

President Vladimir Putin says Russia does not want an arms race and he has promised he will not deploy Russian missiles unless the United States does so first.

Nato Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g dismissed the moratorium request yesterday, saying it was “not a credible offer” since he said Moscow had already deployed illegal missiles.

He said there would be “no rash moves” by the alliance which he said “would not mirror what Russia does”, adding: “We don’t want a new arms race.”

The dispute is aggravatin­g the worst US-Russia friction since the Cold War ended in 1991. Some experts believe the treaty’s collapse could speed an erosion of the global system designed to block the spread of nuclear arms.

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