Statements from the Trump administration indicate that 6 months from Friday it will be withdrawing from the Treaty on Open Skies, an agreement between 35 states including Russia and the US that allows parties to fly observational missions over each other’s territory for military transparency.
“While the United States along with our Allies and partners that are States Parties to the Treaty have lived up to our commitments and obligations under the Treaty, Russia has flagrantly and continuously violated the Treaty in various ways for years,” read a statement from Sec. of State Mike Pompeo.
Pompeo then listed several purported violations including the construction of an Open Skies refueling station in Crimea, which the Secretary said is just an attempt to try and establish control over the annexed peninsula, a move the US “does not and will never accept”. Also cited were denials of Open Skies Treaty flights over Russian military exercises in the Caucasus Mountains that could have involved up to 128,000 personnel and 20,000 pieces armor, and areas on the border with Georgia which Russia claims are independent states, but that Pompeo claims are areas of illegal encroachment into Georgian territory.
The Russian Foreign Ministry denied all accusations, saying Russia has never violated the treaty and that she will do everything in her power to try and salvage the agreement.
“If the US exits the Treaty, a blow will be dealt to a rather fragile balance of interests of its parties. As a result, not only the OST will suffer, but also the European security framework as a whole,” the ministry said in a statement according to RT.
PICTURED ABOVE: Boeing OC-135B Open Skies reconnaissance aircraft, used by the US for Open Skies Treaty Flights.
