THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
(Cologne, Germany)
For Immediate Release |
June 20, 1999 |
JOINT STATEMENT
BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION
CONCERNING STRATEGIC OFFENSIVE AND DEFENSIVE ARMS
AND FURTHER STRENGTHENING OF STABILITY
Confirming their dedication to the cause of strengthening strategic stability and
international security, stressing the importance of further reduction of strategic
offensive arms, and recognizing the fundamental importance of the Treaty on the
Limitation of Anti-Ballistic Missile Systems (ABM Treaty) for the attainment of
these goals, the United States of America and the Russian Federation declare their
determination to continue efforts directed at achieving meaningful results in these
areas.
The two governments believe that strategic stability can be strengthened only if
there is compliance with existing agreements between the Parties on limitation and
reduction of arms. The two governments will do everything in their power to
facilitate the successful completion of the START II ratification processes in both
countries.
The two governments reaffirm their readiness, expressed in Helsinki in March 1997,
to conduct new negotiations on strategic offensive arms aimed at further reducing
for each side the level of strategic nuclear warheads, elaborating measures of
transparency concerning existing strategic nuclear warheads and their elimination,
as well as other agreed technical and organizational measures in order to contribute
to the irreversibility of deep reductions including prevention of a rapid build-up
in the numbers of warheads and to contribute through all this to the strengthening
of strategic stability in the world. The two governments will strive to accomplish
the important task of achieving results in these negotiations as early as possible.
Proceeding from the fundamental significance of the ABM Treaty for further
reductions in strategic offensive arms, and from the need to maintain the strategic
balance between the United States of America and the Russian Federation, the Parties
reaffirm their commitment to that Treaty, which is a cornerstone of strategic
stability, and to continuing efforts to strengthen the Treaty, to enhance its
viability and effectiveness in the future.
The United States of America and the Russian Federation, recalling their concern
about the proliferation in the world of weapons of mass destruction and their means
of delivery, including missiles and missile technologies, expressed by them in the
Joint Statement on Common Security Challenges at the Threshold of the Twenty First
Century, adopted on September 2, 1998 in Moscow, stress their common desire to
reverse that process using to this end the existing and possible new international
legal mechanisms.
In this regard, both Parties affirm their existing obligations under Article XIII of
the ABM Treaty to consider possible changes in the strategic situation that have a
bearing on the ABM Treaty and, as appropriate, possible proposals for further
increasing the viability of this Treaty.
The Parties emphasize that the package of agreements signed on September 26, 1997
in New York is important under present conditions for the effectiveness of the ABM
Treaty, and they will facilitate the earliest possible ratification and entry into
force of those agreements.
The implementation of measures to exchange data on missile launches and on early
warning and to set up an appropriate joint center, recorded in the Joint Statement
by the Presidents of the United States of America and the Russian Federation signed
on September 2, 1998 in Moscow, will also promote the strengthening of strategic
stability.
Discussions on START III and the ABM Treaty will begin later this summer. The two
governments express their confidence that implementation of this Joint Statement
will be a new significant step to enhance strategic stability and the security of
both nations.
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