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Ratifying START a 'national security imperative': Obama![]() US senators-elect push for START treaty delay Washington (AFP) Nov 18, 2010 - In a fresh blow to a landmark nuclear treaty with Russia, ten US senators-elect called in a letter Thursday for delaying a ratification vote until a new congress convenes in January. "We call on you to defer action on this arms control treaty until the Senate reconvenes," the group, all Republican foes of the White House, urged Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. Roy Blunt of Missouri led the group, which included John Boozman of Arkansas, Rob Portman of Ohio, Jerry Moran of Kansas, Mike Lee of Utah, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, John Hoeven of North Dakota, Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire, Rand Paul of Kentucky, and Marco Rubio of Florida. President Barack Obama has called on the Senate to approve the the new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) this year in a "lame-duck" session, but faces stiff opposition from Republicans who romped in November 2 elections. In January, Senate Republicans will see their ranks swell from 41 to 47 members, making the road to the 67 votes needed for ratification that much rougher. The White House said Wednesday that it would forge ahead with the accord and predicted it would rally the bare minimum eight Republicans needed to approve the agreement this year, but that outcome is far from certain. "Proponents of this treaty, aware that today's Senate is likely to support the agreement in higher numbers without our participation, are urging the Senate to give its advice and consent in the coming weeks," wrote the group. "Out of respect for our states' voters, we believe it would be improper for the Senate to consider the New START Treaty or any other treaty in a lame duck session prior to January 3, 2011," they wrote. The START treaty -- signed by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Obama in Prague in April -- restricts each nation to a maximum of 1,550 deployed warheads, a cut of about 30 percent from a limit set in 2002. It would also return US inspectors who have been unable to monitor Russia's arsenal since the agreement's predecessor lapsed in December 2009. |
Obama gathered a hall of fame line-up of distinguished US statesmen and women, piling pressure on Republican holdouts who oppose the pact's ratification in a "lame duck" session of Congress this year.
"It is a national security imperative that the United States ratify the new START treaty this year," Obama said, alongside former Republican secretaries of state and Cold War negotiators Henry Kissinger and James Baker.
"This is not about politics, this is about national security," Obama said, piling pressure on Republicans in the Senate to relent and allow a vote on the pact, which cuts US and Russian nuclear arsenals, before the end of the year.
Obama said a failure to pass the new Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty agreed this year would harm America's national security, its "reset" relations with Moscow and keep US arms inspectors away from the Russian nuclear arsenal.
Asked whether he had the votes in the Senate to pass the treaty, despite Republican delaying tactics, Obama replied "I am confident that we should be able to get the votes."
But it appears far from clear that the treaty can get the 67 votes needed for ratification in the 100-seat chamber in a vote that would represent a much-needed foreign policy victory for the Obama White House.
The task will be even tougher in January when a new Congress, elected in November 2 polls in which Republicans routed Democrats, takes office.
Obama spoke hours before leaving for the NATO summit in Portugal, where he will see Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, whom he assured in Japan on Sunday that passing START was his top priority.
The White House was stunned earlier this week when Arizona Senator Jon Kyl, considered the key stumbling block to passage of the treaty, said he doubted the pact could be brought up in the "lame duck" session.
Failure to pass the deal would suggest that Obama is severely weakened politically after the mid-term polls cast doubt on his ability to pass major legislation and represent a personal humiliation in front of other world leaders.
Obama's guests in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, as well as Kissinger and Baker, included former Republican national security advisor Brent Scowcroft and former Democratic secretary of state Madeleine Albright.
Former senator Sam Nunn and his partner in Senate arms control work, Republican Senator Richard Lugar, were also in the room, along with president Bill Clinton's defense secretaries William Perry and William Cohen.
The treaty restricts each nation to a maximum of 1,550 deployed warheads, a cut of about 30 percent from a limit set in 2002.
It would also return US inspectors who have been unable to monitor Russia's arsenal since the agreement's predecessor lapsed in December 2009.
Obama said he had put Vice President Joe Biden, who spent more than 30 years in the Senate, in charge of the administration's push to pass START and asked him to work "day and night" until it is done.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who sat opposite Obama in Thursday's meeting, and who has good relations with her former Republican colleagues in the Senate, is also intensely involved.
"There is no higher national security priority for the lame duck Congress," Obama said, adding "the stakes for American national security are clear and they are high."
"If we ratify this treaty we are going to have a verification regime in place to track Russia's strategic nuclear weapons, including US inspectors on the ground."
"If we don't, then we don't have a verification regime, no inspectors, no insights into Russia's strategic arsenal, no framework for cooperation between the world's two nuclear superpowers."
Obama also hinted that Republicans were being driven by partisan motives, saying that every US president since Ronald Reagan had agreed an arms treaty with Moscow and won Senate ratification.
Kyl said Tuesday he opposed a vote because of "complex and unresolved issues" about "modernization" of the US nuclear arsenal -- ensuring that the US deterrent remains credible.
In response to Kyl's concerns, the White House weeks ago added 4.1 billion dollars over five years to its 10-year budget of 80 billion dollars for that purpose.
Other Republicans want iron-clad assurances the pact will not hamper US missile defense plans, citing a unilateral statement from Moscow that moves on that front risked voiding the treaty.
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