----- Original Message ----- 
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, April 25, 2000 10:16 AM
Subject: [STOPNATO] New US Radar Site Threatens ABM Treaty


STOP NATO: NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.HOME-PAGE.ORG

http://www.guardianunlimited.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,213835,00.html

New US radar site threatens ABM treaty 
Julian Borger in Miami
Tuesday April 25, 2000
The Guardian

The United States was thrown on to the defensive as
the UN nuclear disarmament talks began yesterday by
allegations that it had installed a new anti-missile
radar in northern Norway, a few miles from the Russian
border. 

Moscow has denounced the installation, believed to be
the world's most advanced tracking and imaging radar,
as a covert step towards the controversial US plan to
develop a shield against incoming missiles, and
therefore a potential breach of the 1972
anti-ballistic-missile (ABM) treaty. 

"Everyone should be aware that the collapse of the ABM
treaty would have a destructive domino effect for the
existing system of disarmament agreements," the
Russian foreign minister, Igor Ivanov, argued in
yesterday's New York Times. "We would be back in an
era of suspicion and confrontation." 

The Norwegian government said the radar, in the border
village of Vardo, was designed to keep an eye on
potentially dangerous space debris, but that
explanation was derided as implausible by several
independent scientists. 

The revelations emerged as talks began at the
conference on the 1968 nuclear non-proliferation
treaty (NPT) at the UN's New York headquarters, and
US-Russian talks on a new disarmament treaty, Start
III, entered their second week in Geneva. 

The US and the Russia have both been under fire from
disarmament watchdogs for negotiating in bad faith.
Both have opted to stockpile and upgrade - rather than
destroy - the warheads they have removed from missile
silos. 

The Vardo radar could have an even more damaging
impact on the already precarious east-west nuclear
balance. It was built in 1995 and moved to Norway in
1998, according to the latest issue of the Bulletin of
the Atomic Scientists, a US journal which monitors
nuclear proliferation issues. 

When a Norwegian journalist, Inge Sellevag, asked the
Norwegian government the purpose of the new
installation, he was told it was to be used by Nasa to
monitor "space junk". But Nasa knew nothing about
Vardo. John Pike, director of the Space Policy Project
at the Federation of American Scientists, said
yesterday: "One of the standard parts of creating a
cover story for an intelligence operation is that the
story is plausible and this cover story was not. 

"This is a type of radar that was developed as part of
the national missile defence [NMD] network, and I
assume the reason they put it up there is to monitor
Russian missile-testing." 

The proposed NMD system is a successor to Ronald
Reagan's Star Wars scheme. It is intended to create a
nuclear umbrella over the US by coordinating an array
of satellites, radars and missiles which would track
and intercept any incoming missiles. Such a system is
banned by the ABM treaty. 

Tests on NMD technology are still under way and
President Clinton has yet to give the system a green
light, but the Vardo radar - along with the proposed
upgrading of the early-warning radars at Fylingsdales
in Yorkshire and Thule in Greenland - suggest that the
Pentagon is already committed to the strategy. 

Critics of the system believe the placing of the
radars con firms that its main target is Russia, not
rogue states like Iran, Iraq and North Korea as US
officials have assured their counterparts in Moscow. 

The Ministry of Defence's claim that the Fylingsdales
radar was aimed at monitoring North Korea were
dismissed by Mr Pike, who said: "Last time I checked
England was on the other side of planet from North
Korea. It might be a good place to hide from North
Korea but not to watch it." 

Meanwhile, US plans to upgrade its nuclear stockpile
and develop "new nuclear options for emergent threats"
were revealed in energy department documents made
available to a court after a legal challenge by
disarmament and environmental groups. 

Greg Mello, director of one of the groups, the Los
Alamos Study Group, said they revealed "a shocking
disregard for US commitments, especially those
enshrined in the NPT, to end the nuclear arms race." 

"It's imperative that these plans be stopped. If we
don't abide by the treaties we've signed, how can we
get other countries to do so," he said. 


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