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Russia suspends nuclear missile treaty

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Moscow: President Vladimir Putin on Saturday said Russia was suspending its participation in a key Cold War-era missile treaty in a mirror response to a US move the day before.


Moscow and Washington have long accused the other of violating the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces agreement, which was signed in 1987 and resolved a crisis over Soviet missiles.


President Donald Trump last year announced plans to withdraw unless Russia fulfilled its obligations.


“Our American partners have announced they are suspending their participation in the deal, and we are also suspending our participation,” Putin said of the agreement, following a US deadline for cooperation.


Putin said during a televised meeting with foreign and defence ministers Sergei Lavrov and Sergei Shoigu that Russia would no longer initiate talks with the US on disarmament.


“We will wait until our partners have matured enough to conduct an equal, meaningful dialogue with us on this important topic,” the president said.


Brokered by US president Ronald Reagan with last Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, the treaty ended a superpower buildup of warheads that had frightened Europeans.


It banned ground-launched missiles with a range of 500 to 5,500 kilometres.


The deal addressed Soviet nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles targeting Western capitals, but put no restrictions on other major military actors such as China.


President Donald Trump said on Friday that Washington was starting a process to withdraw from the agreement in six months.


Trump said he would like to “get everybody in a big and beautiful room and do a new treaty,” but in the meantime, the United States “can’t be put at a disadvantage.”


The US in December gave Moscow a 60-day deadline to dismantle missiles it said breached the agreement.


But Moscow has insisted the disputed 9M729 missile is allowed under the treaty. The defence ministry last month invited journalists and foreign military attaches to a briefing on the weapon system. — AFP



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