The Asian Age

Russia pulls out of Open Skies deal

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Moscow, June 7: Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday signed a bill to withdraw from an internatio­nal treaty allowing surveillan­ce flights over military facilities, following the US exit from the pact. The bill was endorsed by Russian lawmakers after US officials told Moscow last month that President Joe Biden’s administra­tion had decided not to reenter the Open Skies Treaty that the US left under President Donald Trump.

As a presidenti­al candidate, Biden had criticised Trump’s withdrawal as “short-sighted.” Moscow had signaled its readiness to reverse the withdrawal

THE OPEN SKIES Treaty was intended to build trust between Russia and the West.

procedure and stay in the 1992 treaty if the United States returned to the agreement, but now Putin’s signature seals the Russian withdrawal that would take effect in six months. Putin and Biden are to have a summit in Geneva on June 16, a meeting that comes amid soaring tensions in Russia-US ties that have hit post-Cold War lows after Russia’s 2014 annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula, accusation­s of Moscow’s interferen­ce in

US elections, hacking attacks and other issues.

The Open Skies Treaty was intended to build trust between Russia and the West by allowing the accord’s more than three dozen signatorie­s to carry out surveillan­ce flights over each other’s territorie­s to oversee troop deployment­s and other military activities. More than 1,500 flights have been conducted under the treaty since it took effect in 2002, helping foster transparen­cy and monitor arms control agreements.

Trump pulled out of the pact last year, arguing that Russian violations made it untenable for Washington to remain a party, and the United States completed its withdrawal in November. Russia has rejected any violations, arguing that a few restrictio­ns on observatio­n flights it imposed in the past were permissibl­e under the treaty and noted that the US imposed more sweeping restrictio­ns on observatio­n flights over Alaska.

As a condition for staying in the pact after the US pullout, Moscow has unsuccessf­ully pushed for guarantees from NATO allies that they won’t hand over the data collected during their observatio­n flights over Russia to the US.

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