Russia To Bail On Europe Arms Treaty
Lawmakers On Track To Approve President Putin's Initiative, Seen As Rebuke To West
-
Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a document signing ceremony in Moscow, Nov. 6, 2007. (MIKHAIL METZEL/AFP/Getty Images)
-
Fast Facts Russia Learn about the people, economy and history.
In a 418-0 vote, lawmakers in the State Duma approved legislation under which Moscow would temporarily abandon its obligations under the Conventional Forces in Europe treaty, a 1990 pact that has become one several issues straining Russia's relations with the United States and Europe.
Putin announced plans to suspend participation in the CFE treaty in July, amid increasing Russian anger over U.S. efforts to build a missile defense system in Eastern Europe and growing Western influence in the former Soviet Union.
The Duma is dominated by the Kremlin-controlled United Russia party, making approval a foregone conclusion. The legislation still faces approval in the upper house, which is also a virtually certainty, before it goes to Putin for his signature. It would take effect Dec. 12.
The CFE treaty limits the number of tanks, aircraft and other conventional weapons in Europe. But Putin's decision to suspend participation is seen as being driven less by security concerns than by an increasingly confident Russia's desire to emphasize to the West that its interests cannot be ignored.
In a note attached to the legislation, Putin says his decision to seek withdrawal from the CFE Treaty was "prompted by the fact that the treaty no longer meets military and political realities in Europe and therefore does not duly protect the Russian Federation's security interests," according to Russian news agency Interfax.
Interfax quotes Gen. Yury Baluyevsky, Chief of the Russian General Staff, as saying, "the current CFE Treaty suits the United States and NATO, because it allows for the implementation the strategy of NATO's eastward expansion without any limits."
The British Broadcasting Corp. reports the suspension, if passed, would not be a "full-scale withdrawal" from the treaty. According to the BBC, Putin's initiative would see the Russians halt foreign inspections and data sharing about weapons deployments.
Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Kislyak said the Kremlin was not "shutting the door to dialogue", according to the report on the BBC's Web site.
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- It really is looking like the Neocons are trying to force the end of the world. Why? They can''t take their money with them - so what reason do they have. Do they really think Jesus will save them? That''s not what Jesus is about - If there is a Jesus he would strike the Neocons and put them in theirs graves - IF he existed!
- Reply to this comment
- Maybe Russian President Vladimir Putin does not like the fact that former Soviet Republics are joining NATO and deploying U.S. military equipment and maybe Pres. Putin does not like the tensions between the U.S. and Iran with the possibility of War, but thinking the U.S. may attack Russia is going a little too far, no one believes that! In fact even a child knows if the U.S. and Russia go to War it can quickly escalate to a nuclear exchange and destroy Earth at the maximum and Earths Eco System at a minimum. Mutually assured destruction has always kept the peace but that will not be the case if Russia helps Iran acquire a nuclear capability, Iranian fanatics are not rational and mutually assured destruction is not a deterrent with religious fanatics! Russia should come back down to Earth in its thinking and build a safer nuclear reactor in Iran, one that does not require enriched uranium. The U.S. and Russia are not enemies and Pres. Putin should not go there!
- Reply to this comment
- The neocons want a war with russia - otherwise why would they want to locate a "missle defense" on their borders?
- Reply to this comment
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




