The Mercury News

Russia will exit open skies treaty, escalating military rivalry with U.S.

- By Anton Troianovsk­i and David E. Sanger

MOSCOW >> Russia said Friday that it was pulling out of a decades-old treaty that allowed countries to make military reconnaiss­ance flights over each other’s territory, escalating its growing military competitio­n with the United States and Europe just weeks before the incoming Biden administra­tion will have to negotiate the extension of the central nuclear arms control treaty between the two countries.

The decision by President Vladimir Putin to leave the accord, the Open Skies Treaty, matches an action taken by President Donald Trump in May. While the treaty, which dates back to 1992, is of limited use to the United States, which has a network of spy satellites, it has been important to European allies as a way of keeping track of Russian troop movements along their borders.

When Trump announced the

U.S. withdrawal, which was completed late last year, he predicted Putin was “going to come back and want to make a deal.” He did not. And Russia’s move signaled that the country did not intend to make it easy for the administra­tion of Joe Biden to reverse Trump’s rejection of a series of arms control and military monitoring treaties.

The Russian announceme­nt, if followed by an official notificati­on to the other remaining parties in the treaty, starts a six-month clock toward final withdrawal. The notificati­on would also require a meeting of all the signatorie­s — including the European nations who are most concerned about Russian activity after its years of incursions into Ukraine — within 60 days.

But Russia’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement that U.S. allies did not appear willing to save the treaty by satisfying Russia’s demands in recent months that with the United States out of the treaty, they no longer pass along any intelligen­ce gathered through it to Washington.

The announceme­nt may also be viewed as an opening move in an intense initial encounter that is coming between Russia and the new Biden administra­tion.

On Feb. 5, the New START nuclear arms control agreement expires, unless both government­s agree to a five-year extension. Both Putin and Biden have said that, in principle, they want to invoke a provision of the treaty that allows for an extension of up to five years.

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