Kremlin, responding to Trump and Macron, says nuclear dialogue with US is essential

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FILE PHOTO: Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends Russian President Vladimir Putin's annual televised year-end press conference and phone-in held in Moscow, Russia December 19, 2024. Sputnik/Gavriil Grigorov/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said European nuclear arsenals could not be ignored in this dialogue.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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MOSCOW - Russia said on March 7 that it was essential to engage in a dialogue with the United States on arms control after US President Donald Trump made a broad call for the world’s nuclear powers to ditch their weapons.

The Kremlin said these discussions should also include Europe’s nuclear arsenals, especially after French President Emmanuel Macron this week suggested

extending the protection of France’s nuclear weapons

to other countries on the continent.

Mr Trump, who has pledged to make denuclearisation a goal in his second term, said on March 6: “It would be great if everybody got rid of their nuclear weapons”.

He added: “I know Russia and us have by far the most. China will have an equal amount within four - five years. It would be great if we could all denuclearise because the power of nuclear weapons is crazy.”

Asked about Mr Trump’s comments, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters: “Dialogue between Russia and the US on arms control is necessary, especially concerning strategic stability.”

He said European nuclear arsenals could not be ignored in this dialogue.

The issue, he added, had gained greater urgency since Mr Macron’s speech on March 5 in which he floated the idea of extending a French nuclear umbrella to other countries and called Russia “a threat for France and Europe”.

Russia has said the speech contained threats towards it and “notes of nuclear blackmail”.

The Kremlin has called it highly confrontational and said France was staking a claim to “nuclear leadership in Europe”.

Russia and the United States are the world’s biggest nuclear powers, with over 5,000 nuclear warheads each. China has about 500, France has 290 and Britain, 225, according to the Federation of American Scientists.

A US-Russia nuclear arms treaty that caps the number of strategic nuclear warheads both countries can deploy is due to run out in February 2026.

A senior Russian official warned in February that the outlook for extending the treaty, New Start, did not look “very promising”.

Mr Trump said in February he wanted to have conversations with both Mr Putin and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping about

imposing limits on their nuclear arsenals

.

He gave no specific timeline for these discussions, but said he hoped to get started in the “not too distant future.” REUTERS

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