By Deutsche Welle
02 Nov 2023, 09:50 AM EDT
Russian President Vladimir Putin signed this Thursday (11/02/2023) the llaw revoking ratification of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), with the conflict in Ukraine and the crisis with the West as a backdrop.
The 1996 treaty bans all nuclear weapons tests, although it never came into force because some key countries – including the United States and China – never ratified it.
Putin said in early October that his country could revoke its ratification of the CTBT in response to the United States never ratifying it.
Since the start of the conflict in Ukraine in February 2022, senior officials of Russia threatened on several occasions to use nuclear weaponsalthough in other cases Putin showed caution in this regard.
Last week, the Russian president supervised maneuvers with ballistic missiles to prepare his troops for a “massive nuclear attack” of retaliation.
The bill to revoke the treaty was approved by the Russian Parliament last month. Although it never came into force, the agreement was ratified by 178 countries, including nuclear powers France and the United Kingdom, and has symbolic value.
Proponents say it establishes an international norm against nuclear weapons testing, but critics say the deal’s potential remains unrealized without ratifications by major nuclear powers.
The Russian parliament ratified the agreement in June 2000, six months after Putin became president.
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