Russia
says that it has no intention to extend a 20-year-old deal with the United
States that has helped secure Soviet nuclear stockpiles.
Under
the 1992 program initiated by Sens. Sam Nunn and Richard Lugar, the U.S. has
provided billions of dollars in equipment and know-how to help Russia and its
ex-Soviet neighbors deal with the Soviet nuclear legacy. The program provided
reinforced rail cars to carry nuclear warheads, high-tech security systems for
storage sites and helped pay for the dismantling of mothballed nuclear
submarines and other weapons.
The
program cost the U.S. about $500 million per year, according to the Washington
Post. Among its successes, the Washington Post reported it "has ensured
the shipment of nuclear weapons out of Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Belarus,
deactivated more than 7,600 nuclear warheads, destroyed 902 intercontinental
ballistic missiles and 33 submarines and secured 24 nuclear weapons storage
sites."
The
Russian Foreign Ministry said Wednesday that it doesn't want to extend the deal
that expires in 2013. Most reports indicate that Russia will not end the effort
to secure its former Soviet nuclear stockpile, and that it may just want to
renegotiate the deal.
The move
follows Moscow's decision last month to end the U.S. Agency for International
Development's two decades of work in Russia. In explaining its decision to end
USAID's work, the Kremlin said the U.S. government agency was using its money
to influence elections.
No comments:
Post a Comment