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January 26, 2011

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Russia's Duma ratifies nuclear pact

RUSSIA'S lower house of parliament yesterday ratified a landmark nuclear arms pact with the United States, virtually assuring passage of an agreement US President Barack Obama has described as the most significant arms control deal in nearly two decades.

The State Duma voted 350-96 with one abstention to pass a bill to ratify the New START treaty, which was approved by the US Senate late last year. The treaty will now go to the upper house for final approval.

The New START would limit each country to 1,550 strategic warheads, down from the current ceiling of 2,200 and also re-establish a system for monitoring that ended in December 2009 with the expiration of the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty signed by Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev and US President George H.W. Bush.

The treaty's passage has never been in doubt in the Kremlin-controlled parliament, but Russian lawmakers wanted to counter a US Senate resolution raising some Republican concerns that accompanied the December ratification by adding on a similar motion.

Obama pressed strongly for the pact's approval, and Democrats sought to appease some Republican senators by allowing them to raise their concerns about the treaty in the accompanying resolution.

Neither the Senate, nor the Duma resolution would affect the text of the treaty, which is a centerpiece of Obama's efforts to "reset" ties.

While the Senate resolution said the treaty shouldn't restrict US plans to develop a missile defense system, the Duma ratification bill states the treaty can only be fulfilled if emerging missile defenses don't erode the Russian nuclear deterrent.

The Russian draft bill also mimics the Senate resolution's concerns that the remaining nuclear arsenal is effective by emphasizing the need to modernize Russia's nuclear forces.

The Russian legislators said they felt obliged to present their view of the treaty's provisions, given the Senate interpretation.

"The State Duma proceeds from the assumption that the New START treaty can be functioning and viable only in conditions when there is no quantitative and qualitative buildup of the US missile defense systems, developed independently or jointly with other countries," the Duma said in a statement accompanying the passage of the ratification bill.

NATO has approved a plan for a US-led missile defense in Europe last fall and invited Russia to join. Russia's President Dmitry Medvedev was receptive of NATO's proposal but didn't make a definitive commitment.

Medvedev has warned the failure to reach agreement on a joint European missile shield with Moscow may force Russia to deploy new offensive weapons.

The Duma also turned a cold shoulder to the US push for a quick start of US-Russian talks to cut short-range nuclear weapons.




 

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