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| Russian President Vladimir Putin warned that without new talks, there was a risk of an 'uncontrolled arms race' (AFP Photo/Yuri KADOBNOV) |
Moscow (AFP) - Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday urged the United States to begin new arms talks after the collapse of a Cold War nuclear pact between the two world powers.
Moscow and
Washington tore up the Intermediate Range Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces
(INF) treaty on Friday, triggering fears of a new arms race.
"In
order to avoid chaos that has no rules, limits and laws, one needs to once
again weigh all possible dangerous consequences and start serious dialogue
without any ambiguities," Putin said in a statement.
"We
are ready for it."
Moscow has
blamed Washington for unilaterally ending the 1987 treaty which was signed by
US president Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.
The
agreement limited the use of conventional and nuclear missiles with ranges of
500 to 5,500 kilometres (310 to 3,420 miles).
Washington
and NATO accused Russia of developing the new 9M729 missile which they say
violates the treaty, but Russia says its range falls short of 500 kilometres
'Risk of
uncontrolled arms race'
Putin said
Monday that if Russia receives information about US development of new
missiles, it "will be forced to begin the full-scale development of
similar missiles".
Russia
"will not deploy them in relevant regions until American-made missiles are
deployed there," Putin said.
Unless
there are new talks about strategic security, "this scenario means
restarting an uncontrolled arms race," he added.
US Defense
Secretary Mark Esper said at the weekend that he would like to deploy the new
intermediate-range missiles in Asia, but denied that this would spark an arms
race as the weapons are not nuclear.
"Right
now, we don't have plans to build nuclear-tipped INF range weapons," he
said. "So I don't see an arms race happening."
The INF
treaty was considered a cornerstone of global arms control architecture, but
Washington has long called it obsolete due to non-signatories like China being
free to develop their own weapons.
Putin on
Monday accused the US of "seriously complicating the situation in the
world and creating fundamental risks for all" by pulling out of the
treaty.
Washington
launched a six-month withdrawal procedure for leaving the treaty in February,
and Moscow followed soon after.
Any new
treaty to counter the build-up of nuclear missiles would have to include China,
US President Donald Trump said last week.
The other
key arms deal between Russia and the US is the New START treaty which keeps the
nuclear arsenals of both countries well below their Cold War peak.
The deal
expires in 2021 and it is likely not to be renewed amid the current chill in
US-Russian relations, experts say.
The US and
Russia own more than 90 percent of global nuclear stockpiles, according to the
Council on Foreign Relations, a US think tank.

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