Russian Duma votes to scrap Cold War armed forces deal
The lower house of Russia's parliament has voted unanimously to formally pull out of a Cold War-era security deal more than eight years after Moscow halted its participation
The lower house of Russia's parliament on Tuesday voted unanimously to formally pull out of a key Cold War-era security deal, more than eight years after Moscow halted its participation.
The vote in the State Duma came less than a week after President Vladimir Putin introduced a draft bill on May 10 ādenouncingā the Treaty of Conventional Armed Forces in Europe, which aimed to prevent Cold War rivals from massing forces at or near mutual borders. The deal was signed in November 1990, but not fully ratified until two years later.
The Federation Council, Russiaās Kremlin-controlled upper chamber that generally rubber-stamps legislation that the Duma has approved, is scheduled to consider Russiaās pullout from the treaty next Wednesday.
Moscow first announced its intention to completely withdraw from the agreement in early 2015. Since last February, Moscowās military operation in Ukraine has seen hundreds of thousands of Russian troops pour into the country, which shares a border with NATO members Poland, Slovakia, Romania and Hungary.
On Tuesday, Putinās designated envoy told the State Duma that NATO countries had āmade it impossibleā for Russia to remain in the treaty by allowing for the allianceās expansion into Central and Eastern Europe.
Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov also described the treaty as ācontrary to Russiaās security interestsā in an interview published Monday in Parliamentskaya Gazeta, a weekly published by the State Duma.
Ryabkovās remarks were echoed by key deputies during the parliamentary session Tuesday. State Duma speaker Leonid Slutsky charged that the treaty had ālong existed only on paper,ā while Andrey Kartapolov, the chairman of Russiaās parliamentary committee, said that it had been rendered obsolete by NATO's placing of military infrastructure in Central and Eastern European member states.
Ryabkov told lawmakers that completing the withdrawal process would take about six months.