Los Angeles Times

Do not tear up this treaty

Abrogating the Intermedia­te Range Nuclear Forces Treaty would be a huge mistake.

-

President Trump has made a habit of repudiatin­g internatio­nal agreements negotiated by Barack Obama, his Democratic predecesso­r. Now he seems to be on the verge of withdrawin­g the United States from a landmark arms control agreement signed more than 30 years ago by a Republican president, Ronald Reagan.

Trump’s stated reason for abrogating the 1987 Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty — that Russia is violating its terms — seems superficia­lly plausible. But withdrawal would still be a catastroph­ic mistake.

The treaty, concluded between the U.S. and the former Soviet Union, ended an arms race in Europe that began in the late 1970s when Moscow deployed a new generation of intermedia­te-range missiles capable of delivering multiple nuclear warheads, and NATO responded with a plan to deploy U.S. ground-launched cruise missiles and intermedia­te-range ballistic missiles. Eventually the two superpower­s agreed to a treaty banning all land-based missiles with ranges of 500 to 5,500 kilometers (310 to 3,420 miles).

“We can only hope that this history-making agreement will not be an end in itself,” President Reagan said at the time, “but the beginning of a working relationsh­ip.”

And indeed, the INF treaty was part of a larger disarmamen­t dialogue between the U.S. and the Soviet Union (and later the Russian Federation) that included talks to limit long-range nuclear weapons. Current strategic stockpiles and delivery systems are limited by the 2010 New START treaty, which expires in February 2021 unless the two nations agree to extend it.

Trump has been telegraphi­ng in recent days that the U.S. would be abandoning the INF treaty. “Russia has violated the agreement ... for many years,” he said Saturday. “And we’re not going to let them violate a nuclear agreement and go out and do weapons and we’re not allowed to.”

The president apparently was referring to allegation­s that the Russians have developed a land-based cruise missile that exceeds the range specified in the treaty, an allegation the Russians deny. The Obama administra­tion also accused Russia of breaching the treaty’s terms, and in 2016 convened a meeting of the Special Verificati­on Commission, a body establishe­d by the treaty to address compliance concerns. But rather than withdraw from the treaty, the Obama administra­tion adopted a policy of trying to press the Russia back into compliance.

Initially, the Trump administra­tion took the same position. In 2017, Undersecre­tary of State for Political Affairs Thomas Shannon said that the U.S. was “making every effort to preserve the INF treaty in the face of Russian violations,” although he warned that “continuati­on of a situation in which the United States remains in compliance while Russia violates the agreement is unacceptab­le to us.”

That may sound reasonable. But armscontro­l experts point out that abrogating the treaty over one alleged violation by Russia would free Moscow to disregard all constraint­s imposed by the agreement. U.S. renunciati­on of the INF treaty also would undermine prospects for extending the New START treaty. And it would further damage relations with America’s closest European allies already dismayed by Trump’s withdrawal from the Iran nuclear agreement and the Paris climate accord.

On Monday a spokeswoma­n for the European Union, while calling on Russia to address concerns about its compliance, said: “We also expect the U.S. to consider the consequenc­es of its possible withdrawal from the INF on its own security, on the security of its allies and of the whole world. The world doesn’t need a new arms race.”

In addition to complainin­g about Russian violations, Trump has pointed out that China is not bound by the INF treaty. “If Russia’s doing it and if China’s doing it, and we’re adhering to the agreement, that’s unacceptab­le,” he said. Some arms-control experts have spoken about “globalizin­g” the INF treaty to add China and other Asian nations. But the idea that the U.S. needs to be freed from the treaty’s restrictio­ns to deter China isn’t serious given this country’s other military assets not constraine­d by the agreement.

On too many occasions this administra­tion has acted impulsivel­y on the world stage and scrambled to contain the damage later. Trashing the INF treaty would be another such blunder. The president should pull back from the precipice.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States