Skip to main content

Putin Signs Law Taking Russia out of Open Skies Arms Control Treaty

Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a law that formalizes Russia's exit from the Open Skies arms control treaty. (AP file photo)

Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a law on Monday that formalizes Russia's exit from the Open Skies arms control treaty, a pact that allows unarmed surveillance flights over member countries.


Russia had hoped that Putin and US President Joe Biden could discuss the treaty when they meet later this month at a summit in Geneva.


But the Biden administration informed Moscow in May that it would not re-enter the pact after the Trump administration quit it last year.


The Kremlin said on Monday that the US decision to withdraw from the treaty had "significantly upset the balance of interests" among the pact's members and had compelled Russia to exit.


"This caused serious damage to the treaty's observance and its significance in building confidence and transparency, (causing) a threat to Russia's national security," the Kremlin said in a statement on its website.


Moscow had hoped that Biden would reverse his predecessor's decision. But the Biden administration did not change tack, accusing Russia of violating the pact, something Moscow denied.


In January, Russia announced its own plans to leave the treaty, and the government submitted legislation to parliament last month to formalize its departure.


Russian officials said they regretted the US decision not to rejoin, calling it a "political mistake" and warned the move would not create an atmosphere conducive to arms control discussions at the Geneva summit later this month.


 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Some major anti-Islam incidents in Canada everyone should know about

  A Pakistani-Canadian family recently fell victim to another hate crime against Muslims in Canada. Here is a list of some historic attacks against the country’s largely peaceful Muslim community. Five members of a Muslim family became  the latest target of anti-Islam attacks  in Canada. The hate crime claimed the lives of four family members and critically wounded a child.  The 20-year-old Canadian attacker, Nathaniel Veltman, ran over the family with his pick-up truck in London, Ontario on Monday.  Canadian authorities defined the incident as a “horrific act of Islamophobia.”   While Canada presents itself as one of the most liberal states under its Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, anti-Islam hate crimes continue to be a threat to both communal peace and Muslim lives in the North American country.  Canadian legal authorities, like most Western countries, do not define anti-Islam attacks as terrorist acts despite calling incidents by radical armed group...

US to Take Steps against White Supremacists and Militia Groups

A helicopter flies above the US Capitol during the dress rehearsal ahead of US President-elect Joe Biden's inauguration in Washington, US, January 18, 2021. Rod Lamkey/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo Five months after the attack on the US Capitol, the Biden administration on Tuesday will unveil new steps to combat the "elevated threat" posed by domestic terrorism, but will not - for now - seek legislation to battle home-grown threats. Instead, in a national strategy to be publicly unveiled by US Attorney General Merrick Garland, the administration is seeking increased information sharing, additional resources to identify and prosecute threats, and new deterrents to prevent Americans from joining dangerous groups, Reuters reported. The new approach comes after the administration conducted a sweeping assessment earlier this year of domestic terrorism that labeled white supremacists and militia groups as top national security threats. The issue took on new urgency after the Jan....

Senior Iraqi National Intelligence Officer Gunned down in Baghdad

  Unidentified gunmen killed on Monday a senior officer of the Iraqi National Intelligence Service (INIS) in the Iraqi capital Baghdad, marking the second time a member of the vital agency is targeted in the past few months. The officer’s assassination follows a wider murder campaign taking down popular activists for the last 24 months. So far, no official statement about the findings of the ongoing investigation was made. Perpetrators of the attack are likely still at large. However, the INIS identified the slain officer as Nibras Farman Chaaban and had served at the rank of a colonel under the alias “Abu Ali.” It condemned his murder, saying he was killed by a “cowardly and treacherous operation” in a “desperate bid to stop him from carrying out his duties.” According to the statement, Chaaban “tried resisting the assailants by exchanging fire.” Despite fighting back, a gunman in a pickup managed fatally shot the officer with a Kalashnikov rifle. Moreover, the INIS stressed that ...