WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told his Russian counterpart on
Friday that any future arms control talks must focus on an American proposal
for a new arms control accord that includes Russia and China, the State
Department said.
Pompeo
emphasized in a telephone call with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov that
“any future arms control talks must be based on President (Donald) Trump’s
vision for a trilateral arms control agreement that includes both Russia and
China,” State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said in a statement.
China, whose
arsenal of an estimated 300 nuclear weapons is far smaller than those of Russia
and the United States, has rejected such talks.
Ortagus said
Pompeo’s comments came as he and Lavrov discussed “next steps in the bilateral
Strategic Security Dialogue, taking into account the COVID-19 pandemic”.
Trump last
year proposed that the United States, Russia and China negotiate a new pact to
replace the 2010 New START accord that cut deployed U.S. and Russian nuclear
warheads and the bombers and land- and submarine-based missiles that carry them
to their lowest levels in decades.
New START
will expire next February unless the sides agree to extend it for up to five
years. Russia has said it would be willing to extend the accord, but the Trump
administration has declined to state a position.
The Russian
foreign ministry said Lavrov had “reiterated the Russian proposal to extend the
START treaty, due to expire in February 2021”, in his conversation with Pompeo.
“(On the
call) it was underlined that Russia is ready to work on possible new nuclear
weapons agreements, but that it would be important to preserve... the START
treaty while preparations are ongoing,” the ministry said in a statement.

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