Washington says that a new Russian medium-range missile system breaches the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, although US officials also have an eye on China as the 1987 pact constrains the United States but not the rising Asian power.
President Donald Trump said the United States was suspending its obligations under the INF Treaty as of Saturday and started a process to withdraw in six months.
Brokered by then US president Ronald Reagan and last Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, the treaty has banned ground-launched missiles with a range of 500 to 5,500 kilometers and ended a dangerous build-up of warheads in Europe.
“The United States has fully adhered to the INF Treaty for more than 30 years, but we will not remain constrained by its terms while Russia misrepresents its actions,” Trump said in a statement.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that the United States, which formally announced its concerns two months ago, had raised the alleged treaty violation with Russia more than 30 times.
“Russia’s violation puts millions of Europeans and Americans at greater risk, it aims to put the United States at a military disadvantage and it undercuts the chances of moving our bilateral relationship in a better direction,” Pompeo said.
But Pompeo said that the United States was still willing to talk to Russia in hopes that it comes into compliance.
“The United States is hopeful that we can put our relationship with Russia back on better footing, but the onus is on Russia to change course from a pattern of destabilizing activity, not just on this issue but on many others as well,” Pompeo said.
Russia warns of arms race
Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has sought a warm relationship with Trump but is widely reviled by the US establishment earlier declared that the US withdrawal would set off a new arms race.
Ahead of the US announcement, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov voiced regret and told reporters that Washington had decided “a long time ago” to “break the treaty.”
NATO said in a statement that the US allies “fully support” the US withdrawal and agreed that Russia’s 9M729 ground-launched cruise missile systems, whose range is the cause of US concerns, violated the treaty.
But Europeans have also voiced fears of the consequences of the treaty’s demise.
“What we definitely don’t want to see is our continent going back to being a battlefield or place where other superpowers confront themselves — this belongs to a faraway history,” EU diplomatic chief Federica Mogherini said as the bloc’s foreign ministers gathered for talks in the Romanian capital Bucharest.
Lithuania and Latvia — Baltic states keenly aware of the threat from their giant neighbor Russia — backed Washington’s withdrawal.
Published in Daily Times, February 2nd 2019.
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