U.S. threatens to 'take out'
Russia's new nuclear missiles
The NATO Secretary General addresses a press conference ahead of a NATO defence ministerial meeting.- AFP |
The United States has warned Russia that it must halt
development of new missiles that could carry nuclear warheads or else the U.S.
could “take out” the system if it becomes operational. That warning came on the
eve of a meeting between U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and his NATO
counterparts.
By Stefan J. Bos
The United States ambassador to NATO Kay Bailey Hutchison
expressed concern that Russia's planned missile system violates the 1987 Intermediate-range
Nuclear Forces Treaty, or INF.
That Cold War-era pact bans an entire class of weapons — all
land-based cruise missiles with a range between 500-5,500 kilometers or 310 to
3,410 miles. NATO believes that Russia's so-called 9M729 system fits into that
category.
U.S envoy Hutchison said in Brussels that it was in her
words "time now for Russia to come to the table and stop the
violations."
She warned Russia that if the system “became capable of
delivering,” the U.S. “would then be looking at the capability to take out a
missile that," she said, could hit
any of the US allies "in Europe and hit America.”
The envoy spoke shortly before U.S. Defense Secretary Jim
Mattis was due to meet his NATO counterparts at a time of mounting tensions
with Russia.
European Allies
Mattis said Tuesday that he intends to bring the issue up
during his the NATO meeting. The defense secretary also made clear that he
wanted to reassure European allies who expressed concern about President Donald
Trump's rhetoric of America First. "The U.S. has acted, showing that our
commitment to the transatlantic alliance remains iron-clad," he
said.
"Our NATO alliance has also acted. Every NATO ally is
awake today to the reality of Russia's, malicious behavior. Every ally has now
increased defense spending recognizing peace, and the rule of law is best
maintained by strength and unity," Mattis added.
Washington has reportedly shared intelligence evidence with
its 28 NATO allies that Russia is developing the ground-fired cruise missile
and that the system could give Moscow the ability to launch a nuclear strike in
Europe with little or no notice.
The U.S. wants NATO member states to put diplomatic pressure
on Moscow, and NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said that all allies are
concerned by Russia’s continued work on the system.
Russia denies wrongdoing. It claims that U.S. missile
defenses violate the international pact. In the past, the Obama administration
worked to convince Moscow to respect the INF treaty but apparently made no
progress.
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