Birmingham Post

Trump leading world into treacherou­s re-run of the Cold War

- Chris Bucktin STATESIDE

DONALD Trump’s decision to pull out of the landmark agreement that made the world a safer place should worry everyone.

The Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INFT) signed in 1987 by Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev placed a ban on an entire class of weapons.

As the two superpower­s worked to design the ultimate killing machines, the then leaders had the sense to outlaw a new generation of intermedia­te and short-range weapons with a range of between 300 and 3,400 miles.

But it seems sense is the last thing Trump and his Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin have and as a result, they have now placed the rest of the world in danger. It is not the first time the US leader has torn up an internatio­nal agreement.

So far he has pulled America out of deals on climate change, trade and Iran while also toying with a withdrawal from NATO.

But his decision to pull out from the INFT should sound alarm bells for even his most ardent supporters.

It provides the green light for Putin to now start building those missiles which could threaten any capital in Europe as well as all

NATO allies.

Putin responded to Trump’s decision by saying Russia will also abandon the centrepiec­e nuclear arms treaty, adding Moscow will only deploy intermedia­te-range nuclear missiles if Washington does so.

So welcome to the new dawn of nuclear instabilit­y in which agreements that have kept the most dangerous weapons on the planet at bay are disappeari­ng, overtaken by the ever-increasing threat of new, quickly advancing technologi­es.

The likelihood of a nuclear accident or blunder seems to be growing by the day as major nuclear powers invest heavily in their arsenals.

Pakistan has the fastest-growing armoury on the planet. China continues to modernise its nuclear forces, while the States plan to spend more than £1 trillion over the next 30 years on weapons that increase the targeting and kill capability of strategic nuclear weapons.

What makes the issue all the more dire is there are few channels of communicat­ion between adversarie­s, particular­ly America and Russia, which maintain more than 90 per cent of the world’s nuclear weapons.

The two sides have a shared stake in guarding the future of humanity, but such discussion is made harder as Trump struggles with accusation­s of undisclose­d ties to Moscow. All players need to act like sensible grown-ups when it comes to nuclear security. The world has entered a dangerous new era of instabilit­y.

Trump treats the Presidency much like he did his business – bullying others until he gets his way.

But he’s finding to the world’s cost, running a country is not like running a golf club.

It is imperative the US Congress does not allow the Trump administra­tion to plunge the world into a 21st-century nuclear arms race.

Such a dangerous policy not only undermines global security, separates America further from the UK and other allies but more importantl­y plays directly into Putin’s hands while placing peace in Europe at risk.

Trump has circled himself with dangerous advisers who, in resistance to Reagan’s vision, put humanity at danger by pursuing an endless nuclear arms race.

It’s not too late to reverse this trend, but the clock is ticking.

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>Trump delivers the State of the Union address in the Capitol Building

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