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Kremlin tears up arms pact with Nato

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  • Kremlin tears up arms pact with Nato

    Kremlin tears up arms pact with Nato

    Russia's relations with West hit a new low point

    Luke Harding in Moscow
    Sunday July 15, 2007
    The Observer


    President Vladimir Putin yesterday signalled that Russia was on a new
    and explosive collision course with Nato when he dumped a key arms
    control treaty limiting the deployment of conventional forces in Europe.
    Putin said Moscow was unilaterally withdrawing from the Soviet-era
    Conventional Armed Forces in Europe Treaty because of 'extraordinary
    circumstances that affect the security of the Russian Federation', the
    Kremlin said. These required 'immediate measures'.

    The treaty governs where Nato and Russia can station their troops in
    Europe. Moscow's decision to bin it suggests that Putin's talks earlier
    this month with President George Bush came to nothing, and that the
    Kremlin has reverted to its earlier belligerent mood. The Kremlin has
    for months been bitterly incensed by the Bush administration's decision
    to site elements of its missile defence shield in Poland and the Czech
    Republic.


    Putin has derided American claims that the Pentagon system is designed
    to shoot down rogue missiles fired by Iran and North Korea. Instead he
    says the target is Russia.
    Last month he said the US could use a former Soviet radar system in
    Azerbaijan instead. But during his seaside summit this month with Putin
    at the Bush family's Maine home, President Bush rejected this offer - a
    snub that appears to have triggered Putin's latest defiant gesture.

    'The detente lasted two weeks,' Pavel Felgenhauer, a Moscow-based
    defence analyst, told The Observer yesterday, referring to the
    short-lived thaw.

    Putin's decision to leave the treaty will come into effect in 150 days
    after the parties of the treaty have been notified. It comes against a
    backdrop of rapidly deteriorating relations between Russia and the
    West. In particular, Russia's relations with Britain are at their
    lowest point since the Seventies following Moscow's refusal last week
    to extradite Andrei Lugovoi, the former KGB agent charged with
    poisoning Russian dissident Alexander Litvinenko in London.

    The Foreign Secretary, David Miliband, is expected to announce punitive
    counter-measures this week. They could see the mass expulsion of
    diplomats from Russia's embassy in London, and tit-for-tat reprisals by
    Moscow.

    In Brussels, Nato bluntly condemned Russia's decision to abandon the
    treaty, under which Nato and the Warsaw Pact agreed to reduce their
    conventional armed forces immediately after the Cold War. 'It's a step
    in the wrong direction,' said spokesman James Appathurai. 'The allies
    consider this treaty to be an important cornerstone of European
    stability.' Estonia said it deplored the move.

    The Kremlin insisted, however, it had been left little choice. Russia's
    Foreign Ministry called the treaty 'hopelessly outdated'. It said
    restrictions on Russian troop deployment were now 'senseless' and
    prevented 'more efficient measures against international terrorism'.

    Under the treaty, signed by the former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
    in 1990, Russia agreed to scrap much of its military hardware in
    Eastern Europe and limit the number of troops stationed on its northern
    and southern flanks.

    The treaty was amended in 1999, calling on Russia to withdraw its
    troops from the former Soviet republics of Moldova and Georgia. Russia
    ratified the treaty but did not pull out its troops, prompting the US
    and other Nato members to refuse to ratify the treaty until Russia
    withdraws.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov yesterday said Russia could no longer
    tolerate a situation where it had ratified and its partners had not.
    Yesterday analysts said that Putin's move would probably not make much
    difference to Russia's military capacities, but it would allow Russian
    generals to carry out exercises without informing their Western
    counterparts and keep Russian troops in the breakaway regions of
    Georgia and Moldova.

    Moscow's ferocious anti-Western rhetoric is set to continue ahead of
    parliamentary elections in December and presidential elections next
    year to choose Putin's successor.

    Some analysts, however, believe Moscow's move is largely symbolic. The
    moratorium probably wouldn't result in any major build-up in heavy
    weaponry in European Russia, Felgenhauer said. But it would annoy
    Washington, he conceded. 'This will be a major irritant. It will
    seriously spoil relations.'
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