Sources in the Trump Administration say that Russia has
deployed a new cruise missile system that violates the terms of a decades-old arms
treaty. The SSC-8 cruise missile falls under a category of weapons banned by
the Intermediate Nuclear Forces treaty signed by the Reagan Administration in
1987.
The New
York Times reports that two battalions of SSC-8 missiles have already been
deployed in violation of the INF treaty, which banned the deployment of
land-based intermediate-range nuclear missiles. One battalion was reportedly
still located at the missile test site near Volgograd in southern Russia while
the second had moved to an operational base. The Times’ source in the Trump
Administration did not provide the location of the second battalion. One
battalion of the missiles reportedly includes four mobile missile launchers
with about six missiles each.
The estimated range of the SSC-8 is between 300 and 3,400
miles according to GlobalSecurity.org.
This is the class of missile that was banned by the INF treaty. The group
points out that the weapon system may be intended to generate parity with the
China, which was not a party to the INF treaty, and which also falls within the
SSC-8 range. Nevertheless, deployment of the missile in Europe would also
threaten NATO countries.
First reports of the new missile date back to 2007 according
to Popular
Mechanics. In 2014, the US government gathered enough evidence to accuse
Russia of violating the INF treaty by testing the SSC-8. The Obama
Administration attempted to pressure the Russians into stopping development of the
missile to no avail.
“Nobody has formally accused Russia of violating the treaty,”
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told the BBC. “Russia has been
and remains committed to its international commitments, including to the treaty
in question.”
The Trump Administration has already been challenged by
missile testing from Iran. When the Iranians tested a missile in January in
violation of President Obama’s nuclear deal, the Trump Administration responded
by enacting
new sanctions on people and companies related to the missile program and
the Revolutionary Guards Quds Force.
In 2014, Gen. Phillip Breedlove, then commander of NATO,
warned against ignoring the development and deployment of the SSC-8. “A weapon
capability that violates the INF, that is introduced into the greater European
land mass is absolutely a tool that will have to be dealt with,” he told the New
York Times. “I would not judge how the alliance will choose to react, but I
would say they will have to consider what to do about it. It can’t go
unanswered.”
Originally published
on The
Resurgent
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