Russian
Duma Approves INF Treaty Suspension
The
Russian State Duma has agreed to support legislation submitted by Putin
to suspend Russia’s obligations under the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear
Forces (INF) Treaty. Putin submitted the legislation to Russia’s lower
parliamentary chamber May 30. Later the same day, Chairman of the State Duma Viacheslav
Volodin announced that the Duma would support the bill and would provide the
Russian president with the ability to reinstate the treaty “in case the United
States changes its position.”
Putin
signed an executive order March
4 suspending Russia’s compliance with the INF Treaty with similar provisions.
On June
18, the Duma passed the legislation to suspend the agreement, and according to
Russian media reports, the upper house of the Russian parliament (the
Federation Council) may consider the legislation June 26.
According
to TASS, State Duma Defense Committee Chairman Vladimir
Shamanov said May 30 there are no immediate plans to “start manufacturing
intermediate-range and shorter-range missiles” following the suspension of the
treaty. However, it was reported that at the June 18 vote, Russian Deputy Foreign
Minister Sergey Ryabkov noted that Russia would be ready if the United States
deploys INF Treaty-range missiles, but will not be the first to deploy these
missiles “wherever it may be” until Washington makes the first move.
The INF
Treaty banned missiles with ranges between 500 km and 5,000 km. The United
States has accused Russia of violating the treaty by already developing,
testing, and deploying a missile (the 9M729) whose range falls within the
prohibited range.
NATO
defense ministers will meet June 26-27 to prepare defense and deterrence
measures “to ensure the security of the alliance” if Russia does not come back
into compliance with the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, a
European official told Arms Control Today.
Ahead
of the June 26 meeting, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Joseph
Dunford told a
Washington thinktank audience May 29 that the NATO alliance is “putting the
final touches” on its first new military strategy since the Cold War. According
to Dunford, the classified plan was approved by U.S. and European military
leaders in May and is being sent to each NATO capital for approval, which could
take months.
At an
April 4 NATO Foreign Ministers meeting, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg
reiterated that NATO “has no intention” to deploy “ground-launched nuclear
missiles in Europe.” The Pentagon is currently developing ground-launched
conventional INF Treaty-range missile capabilities.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.