The United States formally withdrew on Sunday from the Open Skies Treaty, an 18-year-old arms control and verification agreement that Washington repeatedly accused Moscow of violating.
The withdrawal is the latest blow to the system of international arms
control that U.S. President Donald Trump has repeatedly scorned,
complaining that Washington was being either deceived or unfairly
restrained in its military capabilities.
The U.S. State Department confirmed the move, noting six months had
expired since notice of the pending exit had been issued and saying "the
U.S. withdrawal took effect on November 22, 2020, and the United States
is no longer a State Party to the Treaty on Open Skies."
The National Security Council confirmed the withdrawal and added that "Russia flagrantly violated [the treaty] for years."
It quoted national-security adviser Robert O'Brien as saying the move
was part of an effort to "put America first by withdrawing us from
outdated treaties and agreements that have benefited our adversaries at
the expense of our national security."
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on May 21 announced the U.S. intention to withdraw and gave the six-month notification to Open Skies’ 34 other members, as required under the treaty’s rules.
Russia’s Foreign Ministry condemned the U.S. decision.
"Washington has made its move. Neither European security nor the
security of the United States and its allies themselves have benefited
from it. Now many in the West are wondering what Russia's reaction will
be. The answer is simple. We have repeatedly emphasized that all options
are open to us,” the ministry said in a statement on November 22.
Signed in 1992, the treaty, which entered into force in 2002, allows
its 34 members to conduct short-notice, unarmed observation and
surveillance flights over one another’s territories, to collect data on
military forces and activities. More than 1,500 flights have taken place
under the agreement.
The treaty’s proponents say the flights help build confidence by
showing that, for example, adversaries are not secretly deploying forces
or preparing to launch attacks.
But its critics, particularly among U.S. Republicans, have asserted
the treaty has been violated repeatedly, first and foremost by Moscow.
In his May statement, Pompeo charged that Russian violations included
restrictions on flights near breakaway regions over Georgia, along
Russia’s southern borders, and limits on the lengths of flights over the
Russian exclave of Kaliningrad.
"Russia has consistently acted as if it were free to turn its obligations off and on at will,” he said.
Arms control experts have said while some of the U.S. complaints have
merit, others are misleading. And U.S. military and intelligence
agencies will lose an important source of data by not being party to the
treaty, they said, and NATO allies support the agreement.
"While Russia has violated the treaty, the United States has
reciprocated. NATO allies support the treaty — which focuses first and
foremost on enhancing European security — and wish the United States to
remain a party,” Steven Pifer, a former U.S. ambassador and arms control
expert, said in commentary published last week.
The Trump administration has targeted several international treaties
over the past four years, most notably the 1987 Intermediate-Range
Nuclear Forces Treaty, a key Cold War agreement between the United
States and the Soviet Union.
After years of complaining that Russia had secretly designed, then deployed, a treaty-violating missile, Washington withdrew in 2019 and the treaty collapsed.
Another more consequential treaty, the New START agreement, is also set to expire in February 2021, and U.S. and Russian officials have been struggling to find a way to keep it intact.
But Trump administration officials want to expand the treaty to
include China. And they have also sent mixed signals about new
conditions for extending New START, something Moscow has rejected.
Adding to the uncertainty is Trump’s expected departure from the
White House on January 21, 2021, when Democrat Joe Biden is scheduled to
be inaugurated and take office.
Biden has signaled support for extending New START and preserving other treaties.
"Instead of tearing up treaties that make us and our allies more
secure, President Trump…should remain in the Open Skies Treaty and work
with allies to confront and resolve problems regarding Russia’s
compliance,” Biden said in a statement in May.
VOA