China Daily

US, Russia pulling out of INF sparks concerns

- By CHEN WEIHUA in Brussels chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn

The United States and Russia both announced over the weekend that they will suspend a major nuclear weapons agreement, known as the Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, a decision that has triggered grave concerns over the possibilit­y of a new arms race between the world’s two largest nuclear powers.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, after accusing Russia of violating the treaty and not returning to compliance after a US ultimatum two months ago, said the US will suspend its obligation­s under the treaty effective Feb 2.

“We will provide Russia and the other treaty parties with formal notice that the United States is withdrawin­g from the INF Treaty effective in six months, pursuant to Article 15 of the treaty,” he said on Friday, indicating that the treaty could still be saved if Russia returns to full and verifiable compliance with the treaty within the next six months.

Less than a day after the US announceme­nt, Russian President Vladimir Putin expressed Russia’s strong reaction in a televised meeting with his foreign and defense ministers. “The US partners have declared that they suspend their participat­ion in the deal, we suspend it as well,” Putin said, according to a Reuters report.

Putin said Russia will start work on creating new missiles, including

hypersonic ones, and told ministers not to initiate disarmamen­t talks with Washington, accusing the US of being slow to respond to such moves.

“We have repeatedly, during a number of years, and constantly raised a question about substantia­tive talks on the disarmamen­t issue,” Putin said. “We see that in the past few years the partners have not supported our initiative­s.”

The INF Treaty was signed in 1987 by US president Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. It bans the developmen­t and deployment of groundlaun­ched nuclear missiles with ranges of 500 to 5,500 kilometers.

After Pompeo’s announceme­nt, Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang called the US withdrawal “regrettabl­e”. He said China urges the US and Russia to properly resolve difference­s through constructi­ve dialogue.

Geng voiced China’s opposition to the multilater­alization of the treaty. “What is imperative at the moment is to uphold and implement the existing treaty instead of creating a new one,” he said on Saturday.

The withdrawal from the treaty has sparked concerns among experts.

Axel Goethals, CEO of Brusselsba­sed European Institute for Asian Studies, said it is clear that the US, in withdrawin­g from this treaty, wants to have its hands more free to deal with the new multilater­al world order.

“Let us not forget that this withdrawin­g is also part of the US strengthen­ing its negotiatin­g position in the proxy games of the new multilater­al world order,” he told China Daily on Sunday.

“The loss of the treaty creates a real possibilit­y of an unpredicta­ble and unconstrai­ned US-Russian arms race in Europe and, potentiall­y, in Northeast Asia as well,” said Alexander Vershbow, a distinguis­hed fellow at the Atlantic Council and a former US ambassador to Russia, in an article posted on the council’s website on Friday.

Federica Mogherini, the European Union’s foreign affairs and security policy chief, had earlier called on the US and Russia to stick to the treaty. “What we definitely don’t want to see is our continent going back to being a battlefiel­d or a place where other superpower­s confront themselves,” she said.

Pompeo’s posting of the decision on his Twitter account on Saturday has drawn sharp criticism, with some accusing him of representi­ng the US military industrial complex and many questionin­g how a withdrawal would make things better.

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