China calls on Washington\, Moscow to preserve nuclear treaty

China calls on Washington, Moscow to preserve nuclear treaty

AP  |  Beijing 

called Saturday for to negotiate with instead of pulling out of a nuclear arms treaty the sees as a restraint on its ability to compete with and

China's foreign ministry ruled out negotiating a new multilateral pact to replace the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty.

The US decision on Friday to pull out of the INF might trigger "adverse consequences," said a ministry statement, echoing warnings the move might lead to a new arms race.

accuses of violating the 1987 agreement but also sees it as an obstacle to confronting China's growing military capabilities.

has the fourth-largest nuclear arsenal with about 280 warheads, compared with 6,450 for the and 6,850 for Russia, according to the has been spending heavily to develop longer-range ballistic and cruise missiles.

"is opposed to the U.S. withdrawal and urges the U.S. and to properly resolve differences through constructive dialogue," said a foreign ministry statement. The treaty plays a "significant role" in "safeguarding global strategic balance," the ministry said.

The government said, however, that it opposed possible efforts to create a new agreement to extend to other countries.

"opposes the multilateralization of this treaty," the statement said. "What is imperative at the moment is to uphold and implement the existing treaty instead of creating a new one.

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

First Published: Sat, February 02 2019. 16:36 IST