Authored
by Daryl Kimball, Kingston Reif, and Shervin Taheran on June 19, 2019
Senior Russian, U.S. Diplomats Meet in Prague to Discuss Arms Control
In the
midst of a crumbling U.S.-Russian nuclear arms control architecture, the
top arms control diplomats for each country met June 12 in
Prague in an apparent effort to resume a stalled strategic stability dialogue. But
it remains to be seen whether or when the dialogue will resume.
According
to the State Department,
Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International Security Andrea
Thompson and Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov met to “build on
the discussions” held by Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at a meeting in
Sochi May 14. The department added that Thompson “raised a range of U.S.
national security priorities and strategic security issues on which the United
States would like to engage in a more constructive dialogue with Russia.”
Ryabkov
was more candid with Russian journalists, stating that the
meeting was “a starting point” for further conversations and negotiations.
Though the meeting did not produce an agreement on concrete work plans, Ryabkov
said the meeting was “positive” and both sides recognized the importance of
continued dialogue.
Though
a list of specific items on the agenda was not released by either side after
the meeting, a June 7 Russian news report quoted
Ryabkov as saying that Russia intends to discuss “the [2010 New Strategic Arms
Reduction Treaty] New START Treaty, the prospects for the NPT review process,
the situation with the [1996 Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty] CTBT Treaty” as
well as ”the prospect of the appearance of strike weapons in space, the
situation with the unlimited deployment of the U.S. global missile defense
system.”
The two
sides also discussed the Trump administration’s desire to pursue multilateral
arms control talks with Russia and China. Ryabkov noted that while the idea is
good in the long term, it also needs to include all member of the five
recognized nuclear-weapon states, notably the United Kingdom and France.
Following
a May 14 meeting in Sochi, Russia with Russian President Vladimir Putin and
Lavrov, Pompeo told reporters that
the two countries “agreed that … we will gather together teams that will begin
to work not only on New START and its potential extension but on a broader
range of arms control issues that each of our two nations have.”—KINGSTON
REIF, director for disarmament and threat reduction policy, and SHERVIN
TAHERAN, research assistant
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