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Politics : The Donkey's Inn

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To: rich4eagle who wrote (1578)12/19/2001 12:48:07 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) of 15516
 
ABM Move May Bring Instability, Russia Says
Treaties: Defense minister warns that U.S. withdrawal could free other nations to end peace agreements
December 18, 2001
The Los Angeles Times
E-mail story

THE WORLD & NATION
.

By JOHN HENDREN, TIMES STAFF WRITER

BRUSSELS -- The United States' decision to
withdraw from the Antiballistic Missile Treaty with
Russia could threaten international stability by
freeing other nations to end peace agreements,
Russian Defense Minister Sergei B. Ivanov said
Monday.

After a meeting with Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld, Ivanov said the move would not
unbalance U.S.-Russian relations. But he added that
it could imperil a broad array of treaty agreements
by undermining the spirit of international trust and
cooperation on which they are based.

"Russia is not concerned or afraid regarding its
military security, but we're very much concerned
how other countries behave. . . . Logically, if one
country doesn't abide, why should we?" Ivanov said
in a brief joint news conference after a two-hour talk with Rumsfeld near NATO
headquarters here. Having met five or six times with Rumsfeld this year, Ivanov
said, he saw the ABM decision coming. But "we still believe it was a mistake,"
he said, reiterating Russian President Vladimir V. Putin's assessment.

The Bush administration's argument for abandoning the ABM treaty is that
without the ability to develop a missile shield, the United States and other nations
remain vulnerable to rogue forces capable of launching nuclear missiles or
chemical and biological weapons of mass destruction. To protect against this,
Pentagon officials would have to conduct missile tests that would violate the
treaty, Rumsfeld said.

"We lost thousands in the United States in the attack on the Pentagon and on the
World Trade Center," he told soldiers at a base near Afghanistan on Sunday. "To
the extent that terrorists and terrorist organizations get their hands on weapons of
mass destruction, as each of you know, we're talking about tens of thousands if
not hundreds of thousands" of potential victims.

Ivanov and Rumsfeld noted that the United States and Russia have agreed to
reduce strategic offensive nuclear weapons, but Ivanov added that there is "no
legal mechanism" to enforce that agreement.

Ivanov also used the occasion to seek U.S. support for Russia's effort to have a
greater say in North Atlantic Treaty Organization affairs. En route to Brussels
from Tbilisi, Georgia, Rumsfeld compared Russia to France, which unlike the
other 18 members of NATO does not participate in alliance military activities.

Rumsfeld's visit was his second to NATO headquarters after a 25-year absence.
In his final NATO meeting during his 18-month tenure as defense secretary
during the Gerald Ford administration, there were 15 NATO nations and they
were debating admitting Spain into the alliance.

Urging NATO members to refashion the alliance to face new threats in a
prescient address in July, as Al Qaeda members were allegedly planning the
attacks on the Pentagon and World Trade Center, Rumsfeld said, "We know, for
example, that as an alliance of democracies, our open borders and open societies
make it easy and inviting for terrorists to strike at our people where they live,
work and play."

latimes.com
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