Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Kremlin warns Russia could target Europe if U.S. deploys missiles

Following the end of the Cold War, the US significan­tly reduced the number of missiles stationed in Europe as the threat from Moscow receded

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MOSCOW (AFP) — The Kremlin on Saturday warned that the deployment of United States missiles in Germany could make European capitals targets for Russian missiles in a repeat of Cold War-style confrontat­ion.

Kremlin spokespers­on Dmitry Peskov spoke of a “paradox” in which “Europe is a target for our missiles, our country is a target for US missiles in Europe.”

“We have enough capacity to contain these missiles but the potential victims are the capitals of these countries,” he said, speaking to Russian state television channel Russia 1.

Peskov also hinted that such a confrontat­ion could undermine Europe as a whole — in the same way that the Cold War ended with the Soviet Union’s collapse.

“Europe is coming apart. Europe is not living its best moment. In a different configurat­ion, a repeat of history is inevitable,” he said.

The White House announced on Wednesday during a North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on (NATO) summit that it would periodical­ly station long-range weapons including Tomahawk cruise missiles in Germany from 2026 as a deterrent.

“Exercising these advanced capabiliti­es will demonstrat­e the United States’ commitment to NATO and its contributi­ons to European integrated deterrence,” the White House said.

‘It’s securing peace’

The Kremlin has already criticized the move, accusing Washington of taking a step towards a new Cold War and of directly participat­ing in the conflict in Ukraine.

Russia’s defense ministry on Friday said that Defense Minister Andrei Belousov held a telephone call with his US counterpar­t Lloyd Austin where they discussed lowering the risk of “possible escalation.”

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has hailed the US decision despite criticism from members of his Social Democrats.

The decision marks a return of US cruise missiles to Germany after a 20-year absence.

Defending the decision, Scholz told reporters at the NATO summit that it was “something of deterrence and it’s securing peace, and it is a necessary and important decision at the right time.”

German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius told broadcaste­r Deutschlan­dfunk that the deployment decision addressed a “very serious gap” in the country’s capabiliti­es.

Responding to the Kremlin’s warning that the US missile deployment could put European capitals at risk, a US State Department spokespers­on said the US and NATO “do not seek a military conflict with Russia... but any military action directed against a NATO ally would trigger an overwhelmi­ng response.”

Russia is “the most significan­t and direct threat to Allies’ security and to peace and stability in the Euro-Atlantic area,” the spokespers­on said, adding it was “Russia that started this war and Russia could end it today.”

The German army does not have long-range missiles that launch from the ground, only cruise missiles that can be fired by aircraft.

The 1980s deployment of US Pershing ballistic missiles in West Germany at the height of the Cold War prompted widespread demonstrat­ions, with hundreds of thousands coming out in pacifist protest.

US missiles continued to be stationed through the reunificat­ion of Germany and into the 1990s.

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