Nuclear treaty comes under threat
Mikhail Gorbachev (left) and Ronald Reagan signing the INF Treaty (ANSA) |
Fears increase over the possibilities of a renewed arms race
following the threatened withdrawal from the INF nuclear treaty by the United
States.
By Vatican News
In 1987, U.S. President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev signed a document banning nuclear missiles capable of
reaching targets 500 to 5,000 kilometers away. They called it the INF, or
Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty.
This year, both NATO and the United States claimed Russia
had broken that treaty by developing a missile system that, in the words of a
statement issued by NATO Foreign Ministers at the time: “poses significant
risks to Euro-Atlantic security”. The statement invited Russia to “return
urgently to full and verifiable compliance”.
Russia has denied all accusations.
Now U.S. President Donald Trump has said the United States
will withdraw from the treaty if Russia does not respect its side of the
agreement.
Nuclear weapons analysts fear the international instability
caused by such a withdrawal could result in a renewed arms race between Russia,
the United States and China.
In 2017, the Vatican hosted an International Symposium
entitled “Prospects for a world free of nuclear weapons and for integral
disarmament”. During that meeting, Pope Francis expressed his concern for “the
catastrophic humanitarian and environmental effects of any employment of
nuclear devices”. The Pope confirmed that “the threat of their use, as well as
their very possession, is to be firmly condemned”. “Weapons of mass
destruction, particularly nuclear weapons, create nothing but a false sense of
security”, said the Pope. “They cannot constitute the basis for peaceful
coexistence between members of the human family, which must rather be inspired
by an ethics of solidarity”.
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