The Seriousness of the START Situation
"[Vladimir Putin's decision on tactical weapons] followed the failure by Kyiv's allies to heed previous serious signals [from Moscow because of the] fundamental irresponsibility of Western elites before their people and international security.""Now they will have to deal with changing realities.""We hope that NATO officials will adequately assess the seriousness of the situation."Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov, Moscow
The Russian Foreign Ministry initially said Moscow would keep notifying
the U.S. about planned test launches of its ballistic missiles, but
Ryabkov's statement reflected an abrupt change of course. CBC |
Russian
President Vladimir Putin has decided that Moscow is no longer obligated
via treaty to honour the United States' decision-making by trustfully
alerting it through advance notice regarding Russian missile tests.
This, at a time when the Russian military under Kremlin orders deployed
mobile missile launchers in Siberia as a demonstration of Russia's
massive nuclear capabilities a highlighted link to the invasion of
Ukraine and the fortunes of a conflict that has left both countries in a
veritable stalemate condition.
Russian
news agencies carried Deputy Foreign Minister Ryabkov's remarks that
all information exchanges under the START agreement with Washington have
been halted by Moscow, completing the distancing of the two countries
in their nuclear responsibility pacts following on the suspension of
Russia's ongoing participation in the last remaining nuclear arms pact
with the United States.
Data
relating to the current state of both countries' nuclear forces -- up
to the present routinely released at six month intervals complying with
the treaty -- both parties also exchanged advance warnings of test
launches. Notices of this type represent an essential element of
strategic stability and have for decades. This cooperation allowed
Russia and the United States to properly interpret each other's moves,
making certain that neither would mistake a test launch for a missile
attack.
Termination
of missile test warnings represents another effort on Moscow's part to
discourage the West from continuing to strengthen its support for
Ukraine. Emphasizing Russia's massive nuclear arsenal is a most
transparent threat, one occasioned by the fury of stalemate and the
isolation imposed by the U.S. and NATO upon the Russian Federation.
Augmented by President Putin's announcement of tacticl nuclear weapons
deployed to Belarus territory, as a regional trusted ally.
This photo made from video provided by the Russian Defense Ministry Press Service on Wednesday, March 29, 2023, shows a Yars missile launcher of the Russian armed forces being driven from a shelter in an undisclosed location in Russia. The Russian military on Wednesday launched drills of its strategic missile forces, deploying Yars mobile launchers in Siberia in a show of the country's massive nuclear capability amid the fighting in Ukraine. (Russian Defense Ministry Press Service via AP) |
The
New START treaty was suspended last month, with Mr. Putin stating that
U.S. inspections of Russia's nuclear sites was unacceptable at a time
when Washington and its NATO allies have committed to Moscow's defeat in
Ukraine. While not withdrawing entirely from the pact, Moscow stated
its intention to continue to respect caps on nuclear weapons set by the
treaty.
To
the present, until Ryabkov's statement, it was understood by the United
States that Moscow intended to continue notifying the U.S. of planned
test launches of ballistic missiles, now upset by an abrupt change in
orders.
Russian
drills will see Yars mobile missile launchers manoeuvre across three
regions of Siberia involving measures to conceal the deployment from
foreign satellites and other intelligence assets. No mention from the
Russian Defence Ministry was given of how long the drills would last,
nor were any practice launches mentioned of the nuclear-tipped
intercontinental ballistic Yars missile with its range of about 11,000
kilometers. The Yars missile represents the backbone of Russia's
strategic missile forces.
The
tactical nuclear weapons deployed in Belarus are useful on the
battlefield with their relatively short range and considerably lower
yield, in comparison with the long-range strategic missiles fitted with
nuclear warheads capable of obliterating entire cities. This latest
decision by President Putin follows repeated warning that Moscow is
prepared to use "all available means" -- referring to its nuclear arsenal -- to fend off attacks on Russian territory.
A still image from video, released by the Russian Defence Ministry in October 2022, shows what is said to be a Yars intercontinental ballistic missile launched during an exercise at the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in Russia. (Russian Defence Ministry/Reuters) |
Labels: Moscow, NATO, Nuclear Arms Pact Suspension, Russian Invasion of Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Washington
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