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Kremlin says no interest in US arms race in 'invincible weapons' row

AFP  |  Moscow 

The Kremlin today said will not be part of a new arms race as the and NATO voiced concern over Vladimir Putin's boasts of new "invincible" weapons. Putin stunned the West -- and many in -- on Thursday by using his state of the nation address to unveil a new arsenal of hypersonic weapons and submarines less than three weeks before an election is expected to extend his rule until 2024. The revelations came with ties between and the West at post-Cold War lows over the and conflicts, and accusations that interfered in the US in 2016. Putin said the weapons would render Western obsolete, prompting a harsh response from NATO, which insisted its systems based in were not directed against "Russian statements threatening to target are unacceptable and counterproductive," NATO said in a statement. Putin insisted the next generation weapons would only ever be used in self-defence, though his presentation featured video montages of missiles crossing mountains and oceans, including the Atlantic. US and German shared worries in a phone conversation over Putin's claims, said Friday. "The and the voiced concern about Russian Putin's latest remarks on arms development and its negative impact on international arms control efforts," said a statement by the German chancellery. Putin's rejected accusations was violating any arms control agreements. "We categorically reject any accusations that is violating any provisions and articles of international law on disarmament and arms control," Peskov said. "is not going to be pulled into any arms race." accused of breaching Cold War-era arms treaties, with a State Department saying it was "unfortunate" to have watched a video that depicted a nuclear attack on the Putin presented Russia's military efforts as a response to actions by the United States, which last month unveiled plans to revamp its own nuclear arsenal and develop new low-yield atomic weapons. "No one really wanted to talk to us basically.

No one listened to us then. Listen to us now," Putin said Thursday, prompting a standing ovation from the audience of top officials, lawmakers and celebrities. Nearly half of his almost two-hour speech was dedicated to the country's latest weaponry. Peskov denied suggestions that one of the videos allegedly used a map of the to simulate an attack on "No maps were used there, these are absolutely symbolic contours, there is not any tie-up to any concrete country," he said. Analysts said Putin -- who is all but guaranteed to win a fourth Kremlin term in March 18 elections -- was effectively challenging to a new arms race. "This is a formal declaration of a new Cold War," told AFP. He compared Putin's address to former British Winston Churchill's 1946 speech in which he condemned the and effectively announced the beginning of the Cold War. The expressed outrage at Putin's presentation and his "cheesy" animated video of warheads over US soil -- and said the Russian leader had confirmed long-held allegations about his programme. "We don't regard that as the behaviour of a responsible international player," said. "Putin has confirmed what the government has known for a long time but that has denied prior to this." Underscoring the tension, called off strategic talks with the US set for this month after a delegation snubbed a meeting on cybersecurity, Moscow's to the US, Anatoly Antonov, told Russia's state agency today.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, March 02 2018. 23:05 IST
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