Russian Military Calls US Missile Defense a Threat

MOSCOW — U.S. missile defense plans are a threat to Russian national security and have slowed down progress on a new arms control treaty with Washington, Russia’s top military officer said Tuesday.

Gen. Nikolai Makarov said that a revised U.S. plan to place missiles in Central Europe undermines Russia’s national defense, rejecting Obama administration promises that the plan is not directed at his country.

“We view it very negatively, because it could weaken our missile forces,” Makarov, who is the chief of the Russian military’s General Staff, said in televised remarks.

Makarov’s comments are the strongest yet on the revamped U.S. effort and signal potential new obstacles to an agreement on a new nuclear arms reduction treaty to replace the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty that expired Dec. 5.

The U.S. has insisted that the missile defense plans should be separate from talks to forge a new agreement on cutting the two nation’s nuclear arsenals.

Moscow and Washington hoped that they would sign a new treaty by the end of December, but talks have dragged on.

President Barack Obama’s decision to scrap Bush administration plans for missile defense sites designed to shoot down long-range missiles from rogue states such as Iran drew praise from the Kremlin, which had fiercely opposed the earlier plan as a threat.

In December, Moscow urged Washington to share detailed data about the reconfigured sea- and land-based systems to replace the old plans.

Russian officials at first reacted calmly to U.S. plans to deploy Patriot missile systems in Poland, but have grown increasingly critical in recent weeks.

And Romania last week approved a proposal to place anti-ballistic missile interceptors in the country as part of the revamped American missile shield.

Experts have said the new plan is less threatening to Russia because it would not initially involve interceptors capable of shooting down Russia’s intercontinental ballistic missiles.

Asked Tuesday about the plans in Romania and Poland, Makarov called the U.S. missile defense plans a threat.

“The development of missile defense is aimed against the Russian Federation,” he said.

Makarov said that the planned U.S. missile shield must be part of U.S.-Russian talks on a successor to START. He said that the U.S. refusal to include missile defense in the talks had hampered progress.

“The treaty on strategic offensive weapons we are currently working on must take into account the link between defensive and offensive strategic weapons,” Makarov said. “This link is very close, they are absolutely interdependent. It would be wrong not to take the missile defense into account.”

Russia’s Prime Minister Vladimir Putin warned the U.S. last month that it must share information about its missile defense plans if it wants Russia to provide data on its new weapons.


Articles by: Vladimir Sachenkov

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