If US develops banned missiles, so will Russia: Putin

Moscow: Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday warned the United States that if it walks out of a key arms treaty and starts developing the type of missiles banned by it, Russia will do the same.

Putin's remarks to Russian news agencies on Wednesday came a day after US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced at a NATO meeting that Washington will suspend its obligations under the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) in 60 days, citing Russian "cheating".

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Russia would develop banned missiles if the US did.Credit:AP

"It seems that our American partners believe that the situation has changed so much that the US has to have this type of weapons," he said in televised remarks. "What would be our response? A very simple one: in that case, we will do the same."

Speaking at a briefing of foreign military attaches earlier, General Valery Gerasimov, chief of staff of the Russian military, warned of a Russian response and said that it would be the countries that host US intermediate-range missiles that would become immediate targets for Russia.

When signed in 1987, the INF treaty was lauded as a major safeguard for global security since they eliminated shorter-range missiles that take just a few minutes to reach their targets. The removal of such destabilising weapons would in theory allow more time for decision-making in case of a warning of a missile attack.

US ally Germany, which has been keen to preserve the treaty, called on Russia to try to save it while it still has the time.

"The INF treaty is of great significance for security in Europe," government spokeswoman Ulrike Demmer said in Berlin on Wednesday. "The German government welcomes the fact that the American government is giving its preservation another chance," she added, referring to the 60-day deadline. She also noted that the issue came up in a meeting between Chancellor Angela Merkel and Trump in Argentina on Saturday.

"It is now up to Russia to avert the end of the treaty," Demmer said.

AP

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