Washington wants to quickly deploy new missiles in Asia
US free to deploy weapons following withdrawal from INF treaty
SYDNEY: Washington wants to quickly deploy new intermediate-range missiles in Asia, US Defense Secretary Mark Esper said yesterday. The new Pentagon chief said the US was now free to deploy the weapons following its withdrawal Friday from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty with Russia. “Yes I would like to,” Esper said when asked if the US was considering deploying new medium-range conventional weapons in Asia.
“We would like to deploy a capability sooner rather than later,” Esper told reporters on a plane to Sydney at the start of a week-long tour of Asia. “I would prefer months... But these things tend to take longer than you expect.” “That should be no surprise because we have been talking about that for some time now,” he said. “And I want to say that 80 percent of their inventory is INF range systems. So that should not surprise that we would want to have a like capability,” he said. But Esper stressed the US was not embarking on a new arms race.
“The traditional sense of an arms race has been in a nuclear context,” he said. “Right now, we don’t have plans to build nuclear-tipped INF range weapons. It’s the Russians who have developed non-compliant likely, possibly nuclear-tipped weapons,” he said. “So I don’t see an arms race happening. I do see us taking corrective measures to develop a capability that we need for both the European theatre and this theatre, the IndoPac-Com theatre.”
Reassure our allies
The INF treaty was considered a cornerstone of the global arms control architecture but the United States said the bilateral pact had given other countries free rein to develop their own long-range missiles. The rise of a militarily more assertive China in the region has worried traditional US allies such as Australia and New Zealand, and Beijing’s actions in the South China Sea have alarmed neighbors with competing territorial claims to the strategic waterway.
Esper did not specify where the US intended to deploy the weapons. “I would not speculate because those things depend on plans, it’s those things you always discuss with your allies,” he said. Esper said he chose Asia for his first trip since taking office on July 23 “to affirm our commitment to the region, to reassure our allies and our partners.” The Pentagon chief and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo are due to meet with their Australian counterparts on Sunday.
Washington withdrew from the INF treaty on Friday after accusing Russia of violating it for years. Under the pact signed in 1987 by then US president Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, Washington and Moscow agreed to limit the use of conventional and nuclear medium-range missiles (with a range of 500-5,000 kilometers, 300-3,000 miles). But its unraveling had been on the cards for months amid worsening ties between Russia and the US. —AFP