Thursday, 10 January, 2002, 15:59 GMT
 
 WATCH/LISTEN  ON THIS STORY
The BBC's Nikolai Gorshkov
http://news.bbc.co.uk/olmedia/1750000/audio/_1753391_moscow15_gorshkov.ram
"Russian diplomats will be expecting detailed
Russia attacks US missile plans
 
Russia has pledged widespread cuts in its arsenal
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/europe/newsid_1752000/1752897.stm
Russia has criticised plans by the US to put some of its nuclear weapons
into storage rather than destroy them.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Yakovenko said arms reductions
agreed between the two sides last year should be "irreversible" and not just
"on paper". 

He was speaking after a Pentagon planner said on Wednesday that some of the
weapons which President George W Bush pledged to cut would be kept in
reserve. 


The US is hinting at storing nuclear warheads

The US said it needed to keep weapons in reserve in case of "unforeseen
international events".

It was the second time this week that Russia has criticised US nuclear
policy, currently undergoing a top-level review.

On Wednesday Russia stressed its support for a ban on nuclear testing after
US newspapers reported that the Bush administration was considering lifting
its moratorium on tests.

Safety fears 

White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said President Bush had "not ruled out
testing in the future, but there are no plans to do so".

The US argues it will need to resume testing to check the safety of its
arsenal, especially as weapons get older.


Some weapons will be maintained in a non-deployment status as a hedge
against unforeseen technical international events

Ari Fleischer
White House spokesman
In November, Moscow and Washington agreed parallel reductions in their
nuclear warheads, although nothing was laid out in a formal treaty.

On Wednesday Mr Yakovenko said Russia now wants the reductions to be
"radical", "controllable" and "irreversible".

The BBC's Stephen Dalziel says this latest message from Moscow seems to make
clear that the new mood of co-operation between Russia and the US in the
fight against terrorism does not mean an end to serious disagreements.

Tit-for-tat 

Washington has already upset Moscow by announcing its withdrawal from the
1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in order to press ahead with a new
missile defence programme.


President Putin is looking to radically reform the Russian military

But that decision seemed to have been tempered by the proposal - agreed by
presidents George Bush and Vladimir Putin during the latter's visit to the
US in November - that sweeping cuts would be made in nuclear arsenals.

Mr Bush said the US would cut back over the next 10 years from its current
total of some 7,000 warheads to about 2,000.

Mr Putin said that if the US were to do this, Russia would follow suit,
cutting down from some 6,000 to about 1,500.

Mr Bush's national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, subsequently hinted
that the US might opt for storage of warheads, rather than destruction.

On Wednesday, Washington made its plans clearer.

"Some [weapons] will be removed from operations status and earmarked for
destruction," said White House spokesman Ari Fleischer.

"Others will be placed in retirement for status for eventual destruction and
others will be maintained in a non-deployment status as a hedge against
unforeseen technical international events," he said.

However, Mr Putin is keen to scrap warheads which are expensive to maintain
as part of a wider plan to reform the armed forces.

Our correspondent says that if the Americans are not scrapping the warheads,
the Russian military will see unilateral destruction by Moscow as a sign of
weakness. 


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