Russia seeks to discuss cold war arms pact

RUSSIA: Russia requested an emergency conference yesterday to discuss an arms control pact after accusing Nato nations of ignoring…

RUSSIA:Russia requested an emergency conference yesterday to discuss an arms control pact after accusing Nato nations of ignoring the deal negotiated in the months after the cold war ended.

Last month, President Vladimir Putin froze Moscow's commitments under the Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) Treaty and said Russia would quit if a Russia-Nato council failed to find a solution suitable to Moscow.

"Russia, on May 28th, approached the Netherlands, the depositary of the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty, with a request to call an emergency conference on June 12th to 15th in Vienna," Russia's foreign ministry said in a statement.

The statement did not specify what Russia was planning to propose at the conference, but its move could further strain relations with the US already soured by a row over US plans to build a missile shield in eastern Europe.

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Moscow opposes the scheme to base 10 missile interceptors in Poland and a radar in the Czech Republic from 2012 to head off what Washington sees as a threat from Iran and North Korea.

US President George W Bush will meet Mr Putin at the G8 summit of world leaders in Germany on June 6th to 8th and is due to visit the Czech Republic and Poland while he is in Europe.

Mr Putin cited the US plan as the last straw which pushed him to freeze Moscow's CFE commitments.The CFE pact, signed in 1990 and updated in 1999, limits the number of battle tanks, heavy artillery, combat aircraft and attack helicopters deployed and stored between the Atlantic and Russia's Ural mountains.

But after the Soviet Union collapsed and most of its Warsaw Pact allies became Nato members, the CFE treaty - still described by officials as a cornerstone of security in Europe - became a largely symbolic document.

The Western partners refuse to ratify it until Russia pulls out bases from Georgia and Moldova, as it promised when the treaty was reviewed in 1999. Russia, which is in the process of pulling out of Georgia, says this issue is not part of the CFE and accuses the West of artificially linking the two issues.

Moscow, unhappy about Nato's expansion eastwards, says US plans to open bases for several thousand soldiers in Romania and Bulgaria this year are in breach of the CFE.

Nato officials insist the bases are not permanent installations and cannot be seen as a breach.

"Russia considers that the exceptional circumstances which serve as grounds for calling the conference include the serious problems that have arisen in implementing the treaty by Nato countries as a result of the expansion of the alliance," the Russian foreign ministry added.

Russian officials have expressed unhappiness with parts of the treaty requiring it to notify other signatories when it carries out redeployments of its forces inside its own borders.

Some analysts say Russia's departure from the CFE could become a mirror step to match Washington's 2001 decision to quit the cold war Anti-Ballistic Missile pact with Moscow, which the US said prevented it from building a missile defence system. - (Reuters)