Russia formally withdraws from key post-Cold War European armed forces
treaty
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[November 07, 2023]
By Guy Faulconbridge and Lidia Kelly
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia on Tuesday formally withdrew from a landmark
security treaty which limited key categories of conventional armed
forces, blaming the United States for undermining post-Cold War security
with the enlargement of the NATO military alliance.
The 1990 Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE), signed a
year after the fall of the Berlin Wall, placed verifiable limits on
categories of conventional military equipment that NATO and the
then-Warsaw Pact could deploy.
The treaty was designed to prevent either side of the Cold War from
amassing forces for a swift offensive against the other in Europe, but
was unpopular in Moscow as it blunted the Soviet Union's advantage in
conventional weapons.
Russia suspended participation in the treaty in 2007 and halted active
participation in 2015. More than a year after the full-scale invasion of
Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin in May signed a decree denounced the
pact.
Russia's foreign ministry said Russia had formally withdrawn from the
pact at midnight - and that the treaty was now "history".
"The CFE Treaty was concluded at the end of the Cold War, when the
formation of a new architecture of global and European security based on
cooperation seemed possible, and appropriate attempts were made," the
ministry said.
Russia said the U.S. push for enlargement of NATO had led to alliance
countries "openly circumventing" the treaty's group restrictions, and
added that the admission of Finland into NATO and Sweden's application
meant the treaty was dead.
"Even the formal preservation of the CFE Treaty has become unacceptable
from the point of view of Russia's fundamental security interests," the
ministry said, noting that the United States and its allies did not
ratify the updated 1999 CFE.
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Deputy head of Russia's Security Council and chairman of the United
Russia party Dmitry Medvedev visits the Raduga State Machine
Building Construction Bureau named after A. Bereznyak in Dubna,
Moscow region, Russia February 2, 2023. Sputnik/Yekaterina Shtukina/Pool
via REUTERS/File Photo
The war in Ukraine has triggered the worst crisis in Moscow's
relations with the West since the depths the Cold War. Kremlin
spokesman Dmitry Peskov said over the weekend that relations with
the United States were below zero.
After Russia announced its intention to exit the treaty this year,
NATO condemned the decision, saying it undermined Euro-Atlantic
security.
"Russia has for many years not complied with its CFE obligations,"
NATO said in June. "Russia's war of aggression against Ukraine, and
Belarus' complicity, is contrary to the objectives of the CFE
Treaty."
The United States and its allies had linked ratification of the
adapted 1999 CFE to Russia fulfilling commitments on Georgia and
Moldova. Russia said that linkage was wrong.
In 2011, in response to the Russian "suspension", which Washington
said was not legal under the treaty, the United States and NATO
ceased implementing it in relation to Russia, according to the State
Department.
"Russia's 'suspension' of Treaty implementation since 2007 has
seriously eroded the Treaty's verifiability, decreased transparency,
and undermined the cooperative approach to security that have been
core elements of the NATO-Russia relationship and European security
for more than two decades," the State Department said in 2020.
(Reporting by Lidia Kelly in Melbourne and Guy Faulconbridge in
Moscow; Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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