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December 13, 2001
Office of the Press Secretary, White House
STATEMENT
BY THE PRESS SECRETARY
ANNOUNCEMENT
OF WITHDRAWAL FROM THE ABM TREATY
The circumstances
affecting U.S. national security have changed fundamentally since the
signing of the ABM Treaty in 1972. The attacks against the U.S. homeland
on September 11 vividly demonstrate that the threats we face today are
far different from those of the Cold War. During that era, now fortunately
in the past, the United States and the Soviet Union were locked in an
implacably hostile relationship. Each side deployed thousands of nuclear
weapons pointed at the other. Our ultimate security rested largely on
the grim premise that neither side would launch a nuclear attack because
doing so would result in a counter-attack ensuring the total destruction
of both nations.
Today, our
security environment is profoundly different. The Cold War is over. The
Soviet Union no longer exists. Russia is not an enemy, but in fact is
increasingly allied with us on a growing number of critically important
issues. The depth of United States-Russian cooperation in counterterrorism
is both a model of the new strategic relationship we seek to establish
and a foundation on which to build further cooperation across the broad
spectrum of political, economic and security issues of mutual interest.
Today, the
United States and Russia face new threats to their security. Principal
among these threats are weapons of mass destruction and their delivery
means wielded by terrorists and rogue states. A number of such states
are acquiring increasingly longer-range ballistic missiles as instruments
of blackmail and coercion against the United States and its friends and
allies. The United States must defend its homeland, its forces and its
friends and allies against these threats. We must develop and deploy the
means to deter and protect against them, including through limited missile
defense of our territory.
Under the
terms of the ABM Treaty, the United States is prohibited from defending
its homeland against ballistic missile attack. We are also prohibited
from cooperating in developing missile defenses against long-range threats
with our friends and allies. Given the emergence of these new threats
to our national security and the imperative of defending against them,
the United States is today providing formal notification of its withdrawal
from the ABM Treaty. As provided in Article XV of that Treaty, the effective
date of withdrawal will be six months from today.
At the same
time, the United States looks forward to moving ahead with Russia in developing
elements of a new strategic relationship.
- In the
inter-related area of offensive nuclear forces, we welcome President Putin's
commitment to deep cuts in Russian nuclear forces, and reaffirm our own
commitment to reduce U.S. nuclear forces significantly.
- We look
forward to continued consultations on how to achieve increased transparency
and predictability regarding reductions in offensive nuclear forces.
- We also
look forward to continued consultations on transparency, confidence building,
and cooperation on missile defenses, such as joint exercises and potential
joint development programs.
- The United
States also plans to discuss with Russia ways to establish regular defense
planning talks to exchange information on strategic force issues, and
to deepen cooperation on efforts to prevent and deal with the effects
of the spread of weapons of mass destruction and their means of delivery.
The United
States intends to expand cooperation in each of these areas and to work
intensively with Russia to further develop and formalize the new strategic
relationship between the two countries.
The United
States believes that moving beyond the ABM Treaty will contribute to international
peace and security. We stand ready to continue our active dialogue with
allies, China, and other interested states on all issues associated with
strategic stability and how we can best cooperate to meet the threats
of the 21st century. We believe such a dialogue is in the interest of
all states.
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