(The Fiscal Times) --- At a time when
European officials concerned about Russian aggression in Eastern Europe are
openly calling for the creation of a Pan-European army, Moscow has announced it will cease all
involvement in a major arms control treaty that was signed at the end of the
Cold War.
The Treaty on
Conventional Armed Forces in Europe was an
agreement signed in 1990 between the 16 North Atlantic Treaty Organization
countries and six Warsaw Pact countries. It set caps on the number of soldiers,
tanks, artillery pieces and other non-nuclear military assets that could be
stationed in Europe .
State-run media reported
that the decision to “withdraw completely” from the treaty was announced by
Anton Mazur, head of the Russian delegation arms control talks in Vienna .
“For years, the
Russian side has been doing its best to maintain viability of the regime of
control over conventional arms, it initiated talks on adapting the Treaty on
Conventional Armed Forces in Europe , it
ratified the agreement on Adapted CFE Treaty,” Mazur said, according to the
Kremlin-owned news service ITAR-TASS. “Regrettably, NATO countries have
preferred to dodge CFE provisions by means of the alliance’s expansion and use
any pretexts to prevent the Agreement on Adapted CFE Treaty from coming into
effect. This course pursued despite our repeated warning about its harmful
impacts on the regime of control over conventional weapons led to the
unavoidable result — Russia ’s
suspending the CFE Treaty in 2007.”
Mazur added, “This
step does not mean that Russia
rejects further dialogue on control over conventional arms in Europe
if and when our partners are ripe for that. We are still ready for joint work
on a new regime of control over conventional arms in Europe, which is in the
interests of both Russia
and other European states.”
The announcement
comes just days after European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker called
for creating a single army to represent the entire European Union, citing
ongoing Russian aggression in Ukraine
as a primary reason.
“A common European
army would convey a clear message to Russia that we are serious about
defending our European values,” Juncker said.
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