Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Russia rejects space weapon claim as ‘propaganda’

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MOSCOW (AFP) - Russia on Friday dismissed accusation­s from the United States and Britain that it had tested an anti- satellite weapon in space as “propaganda”.

Moscow responded after the United States Space Command on Thursday accused Russia of test-firing an anti- satellite weapon in space and warned the threat against US systems was “real, serious and increasing”.

The head of Britain's Space Directorat­e, Air Vice-Marshal Harvey Smyth, also reacted, tweeting that “actions of this kind threaten the peaceful use of space.” The Russian foreign ministry insisted on Moscow's “commitment to obligation­s on the non-discrimina­tory use and study of space with peaceful aims.

“We call on our US and British colleagues to show profession­alism and instead of some propagandi­stic informatio­n attacks, sit down for talks,” the ministry said in a statement.

The US said that Russia conducted a “non-destructiv­e test of a space-based anti- satellite weapon”.

“Clearly this is unacceptab­le,” tweeted US nuclear disarmamen­t negotiator Marshall Billingsle­a, adding that it would be a “major issue” discussed next week in Vienna, where he is in talks on a successor to the New START treaty.

The treaty caps the nuclear warheads of the US and Russia -- the two Cold War-era superpower­s.

The Russian foreign ministry said tests carried out by the country's defence ministry on July 15 “did not create a threat for other space equipment and most importantl­y, did not breach any norms or principles of internatio­nal law.” It in turn accused the US and Britain of moves to develop anti- satellite weaponry.

The US and Britain “naturally keep silent about their own efforts,” it said, claiming the countries had “programmes on the possible use of 'inspector satellites' and 'repair satellites' as counter- satellite weapons.”

Commenting earlier Friday on the accusation­s, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia supports “full demilitari­sation of space and not basing any type of weapons in space.” The US Space Command said the test consisted of Russia's satellite called Cosmos 2543 injecting an object into orbit.

The remarks also came as China launched a rover to Mars on Thursday, a journey coinciding with a similar US mission as the powers take their rivalry into deep space.

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