February 16, 200719 yr Russia May Scrap U.S. Arms Control Treaty Reuters DefenseNews MOSCOW -- Russia warned the United States on Thursday it might pull out of a Cold War nuclear arms reduction treaty because of plans by Washington to build a missile shield in Eastern Europe. General Yuri Baluyevsky, head of the Russian general staff, said Russia could unilaterally withdraw from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF Treaty), Russian news agencies reported. When asked whether Russia would pull out of the agreement, Baluyevsky, said: "We will see how our American partners are going to act," Interfax news agency reported. "What they are doing at the moment -- creating a third positioning region for anti-missile defense in Europe -- is totally inexplicable," he said. The INF treaty was one of the key arms control pacts of the Cold War. The treaty was signed by Mikhail Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan in December 1987. "There is a possibility of leaving the agreement if one of the sides presents convincing evidence," Baluyevsky said, Interfax reported. "Today there is such convincing evidence - many countries are developing and perfecting medium range rockets." The United States has suggested the shield is needed to protect Europe from Iranian missiles but Russian officials have said Washington and its NATO allies are building the shield because of Russia. "Our efforts to deploy missile defense systems around the world, and in this case we’re working very closely with the Czech and the Polish governments to develop a system in Central Europe, is in no way directed at the Russian strategic forces," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said in Washington. "This is in no way directed at Russia ... We have offered to cooperate with Russia on missile defense because we believe that we face a common set of threats emanating from the Middle East as well as other areas," he told reporters. McCormack later said that while Washington had received reports "from various Russian sources" that Moscow might pull out of the treaty, it had not heard anything formally from the Russian government.
February 16, 200719 yr For reasons like these I often think we are in just as much, and perhaps more, danger from nuclear conflict (on some scale) as we ever were during the "Cold War". Its just a different beast.
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