Chủ Nhật, 3 tháng 2, 2019

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"That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind."

Over 238,000 miles away, the U.S. Consulate General in Chennai

established its present day home right here at Gemini flyover, Chennai, then Madras.

The year was 1969.

The library's current home in this building, began when Chester Bowles came here

to dedicate the building in January of 1969.

Hello! I'm Robert Burgess,

the Consul General of the United States here in Chennai.

We hope you will join us as we celebrate 50 years in this historic Consulate building.

I've been part of a film festival which we held here which was all of musicals.

It has been a blessing to all the scholars, citizens, students of this city.

I was an assistant professor here, then grown onto become the vice principal

and now the principal.

I definitely wanted students also to go through that exciting journey which I had myself gone through.

The Consulate and the American Center has had a legacy of supporting strong U.S.- India

people-to-people ties.

Hope you join us as we celebrate 50 years through 2019!

For more infomation >> Golden Jubilee | U.S. Consulate General Chennai Building - Duration: 1:28.

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[HARSH TRUTH] The REAL reason US Government Shutdown isn't over - Duration: 2:33.

Recent correspondence from the White House has informed the public of an itchy outbreak.

We caught up with president Trump this afternoon for comment, and the president revealed his

unfortunate first hand experience...

Hazardous materials expert John Reamer tells us, inner city teens are ghosting after discovering

fermented rinds along the foundation of the Trump tower.

Live polls show the public is divided on this issue.

We have two sides battling for a decision on what to do.

So, what is the solution here?

49% of Americans argue that each Brisbane pickled summit fox was quickly entertained

before packing.

This demographic takes pride in their focus on the powerful padded hinds, and strongly

believe Americans will feel the results.

Currently on the winning side, 51% of Americans believe that the Trump Administration should

not be storing fermented rinds where inner city teens can access them.

As we have seen, it's causing an itchy outbreak, and parents are riled up.

SWAT has been deployed to handle the most aggressive units.

Chief Tamerian reports his team is currently containing the steaming worm-like appendage.

Even as it flew back and forth, knocking over the metal tray and bursting the ceiling lights

before struggling to detach its roots from the tattered, foamy carcass.

Those who disagree with the Trump administration's choices here may be correct, but in our editorial

opinion, the more pressing issue here is that one can't expect to pin a horse whisperer

to the hay and rub two salted limes into their sockets.

I'd love to know your thoughts.

How is the government shutdown affecting you?

Have you encountered any fermented rinds or splined, rusted pecking towers?

Let us know in the comment section below, and be sure to absolutely SMASH that like

button, and subscribe for more FREE pattern interrupts.

For your health!

For more infomation >> [HARSH TRUTH] The REAL reason US Government Shutdown isn't over - Duration: 2:33.

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Putin says Russia will follow US and terminate Cold War nuclear pact - Daily News - Duration: 13:40.

President Vladimir Putin says he is suspending Russian participation in a landmark Cold War-era missile treaty in response to the US announcement yesterday

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced Friday that the US would no longer comply with the treaty which kept intermediate range missiles out of Europe, beginning as soon as Saturday

Not to be outdone Putin stated today: 'Our American partners have announced they are suspending their participation in the deal, and we are also suspending our participation

'  He continued: 'We will wait until our partners have matured enough to conduct an equal, meaningful dialogue with us on this important topic

' Putin made the statement at a televised meeting with foreign and defence ministers Sergei Lavrov and Sergei Shoigu that Russia would no longer initiate talks with the US on disarmament

Putin also said that Russia will start working on creating new missiles, including supersonic ones

Pompeo threatened on Friday America would 'terminate' the treaty by Saturday if Russia did not come into compliance with it

Speaking at the State Department he said: 'For years Russia has violated the terms of the intermediate range nuclear forces treaty without remorse

 'Russia has refused to take any steps to return real and verifiable compliance over these 60 days

'The United States will therefore suspend its obligations under the INF treaty effective February 2nd

' Share this article Share 1k shares But Moscow has long insisted it does not violate the agreement, and last month invited reporters and foreign military attaches to a briefing on the disputed weapons system

Lavrov on Saturday repeated Russian accusations that Washington itself has been in violation of the deal for many years

At the meeting, Putin said Russia would seek to develop medium-range missiles in response to what he said were similar projects in the US

But he told the ministers that Russia would 'not be drawn into a costly new arms race'

Russia would only deploy intermediate- and short-range missiles in Europe or elsewhere in answer to similar moves from the US, he added

Putin has previously threatened to develop nuclear missiles banned under the INF treaty if it is scrapped

European leaders have voiced fears over the consequences of the treaty's demise and called on Russia to address concerns before the United States formally leaves in August

Signed in 1987 towards the end of the Cold War by then US president Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, the treaty bans ground-launched missiles with a range of between 315 miles to 3,415 miles

The deal resolved a crisis over Soviet nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles targeting Western capitals, but put no restrictions on other major military actors such as China

In a statement issued on Friday, Trump suggested ties could improve markedly if Russia were willing to compromise on arms control, saying all sides must live up to such agreements

'We stand ready to engage with Russia on arms control negotiations . and, importantly, once that is done, develop, perhaps for the first time ever, an outstanding relationship on economic, trade, political, and military levels,' he said

But the withdrawal could lead to the U.S. developing new nuclear weapons of the type which were stationed in Europe in the 1980s to huge public controversy - and potentially stationing them on the continent again

  A senior official cited prior US efforts to negotiate with Russia. 'We have had a series of discussions at the highest levels,' the official said

'There was even an effort to arrange at highest level, President Putin and President Trump, that President Trump made the decision to cancel because of Russia's absolutely unlawful and flagrant violation of international law with respect to the of seizing 24 Ukrainian sailors,' the official said, referencing the cancelled formal meeting in Buenos Aires

The US side called off that formal meeting in protest of Russia's firing on Ukrainian vessels in the Kerch Straight incident

 However, it was revealed this week that Trump and Putin did meet privately in Buenos Aires, speaking for up to 15 minutes, the Financial Times reported, citing a Russian government official

The report did not state that they spoke about the missile treaty.  A few hours before Pompeo's announcement, the NATO Western security alliance issued a statement saying it would 'fully support' the US withdrawal notice

Speaking before Pompeo's announcement, German Chancellor Angela Merkel emphasized the importance of using the six months window to keep talking

Senator Bob Menendez, the senior Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, accused Trump failing to grasp the importance of arms control treaties or of having a wider strategy to control the spread of nuclear weapons

'Today´s withdrawal is yet another geo-strategic gift to Vladimir Putin,' he said

'America really wants to develop new weapons systems which are in breach of this treaty,' Konstantin Kosachyov, senior Russian lawmaker, wrote on social media yesterday, saying the alleged Russian violation of the treaty had been a convenient pretext

 The Trump administration had forecast its withdrawal from the 1987 pact, citing concerns that Russia wasn't honoring it and that it didn't include China, which has engaged in its own missile program

America's exit kicks in within a 60-day period, which will be followed by a six-month period to withdraw from the landmark Cold War agreement

 Leaving the treaty would allow the U.S. to develop longer-range conventional land-based missiles than it currently has - but which China is  currently developing because it was not part of the banning treaty

The treaty was signed in 1987 as a breakthrough in reducing nuclear tensions.It banned the U

S. and the then Soviet Union from having ground-based missiles, whether nuclear or conventional, which led to the US getting rid of its nuclear land-based cruise and Pershing II missiles

 Public protests greeted the missiles being stationed in Europe and the Soviets saw them as an escalation of Cold War tensions

                  HOW U.S. MISSILES LED TO PROTEST IN  EUROPE IN THE 1980s - AND TOOK THE WORLD CLOSE TO THE NUCLEAR BRINK  Both the U

S. and the Soviets expected that if they went to war, Europe would be their battleground

By the early 1980s, the U.S. under Ronald Reagan was outspending the Soviets and introducing dramatically improved new weapons in the air and on the ground

In particular, the Soviet SS-20 medium-range nuclear missiles, launched from mobile carriers, were seen as the biggest threat to NATO forces if there were to be an exchange of weapons

 Nuclear missiles which could match their destructive power were a priority and the Pershing II was developed which could destroy underground bunkers and silos and reach Soviet territory in just six minutes - making them both undetectable and capable of largely killing off the Soviet ability to respond

 But moving the missiles into the places where they would be used in battle created a whole new dimension of conflict for the U

S. and its NATO allies - this time with peace protesters who made their deployment the focus of their rage

  Beginning in 1983, two deployments  in particular were to become infamous flashpoints

In the UK, the U.S. Air Force base at Greenham Common, Berkshire, to the west of London, would be used for 160 medium-range nuclear cruise missiles, and a smaller number of Pershing II rockets

RAF Molesworth in Cambridgeshire would receive 64 cruise missiles.In Germany, three bases - Neu-Ulm, Mutlangen and Neckarsulm - would receive a total of 108 Pershing IIs

But in both countries the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament launched huge and widespread protests

  In Germany, Mutlangen became the focal point, while in Greenham Common, a peace camp of women against nuclear weapons sprang up at the perimeter

Attempts to move munitions were met with sit-down protests on roads outside.In Bonn, then the capital of West Germany, as many as 400,000 people took part in one anti-Pershing protest, part of a day of demonstrations across Europe, while other protests saw a human chain from U

S. headquarters in Stuttgart to the gates of Mutlangen.1983 also saw one of the most dangerous moments of the Cold War when NATO's Able Archer war games, which involved activating troops and giving dummy instructions to fire nuclear weapons, were misunderstood by the Soviets

They thought the exercise was really preparations for a first strike with the new Pershing arsenal part of the plan

 The Soviets ordered its nuclear arsenal to be prepared for action and placed bombers on high alert

  If NATO forces under U.S. command had moved to an increased state of readiness, the Soviets could well have launched their own nuclear weapons

 Spy Oleg Gordiesky later wrote an account of the tense moments, which ended when Able Archer concluded on November 11 1983

What peace protesters had not realized was that behind the scenes, the U.S. had made an offer in the late 1970s to the Soviets, that if it agreed to get rid of its SS-20s, the U

S, would withdraw the Pershings and the cruise missiles.By 1986, the Soviet Union was lead by Mikhail Gorbachev, and a deal began to take shape

By September 1987, the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty was signed by Reagan and Gorbachev in Washington D

C. It eliminated all the weapons being protested against in the space of four years, leaving just a handful of mementos in museums

Now however, its future appears doomed. 

For more infomation >> Putin says Russia will follow US and terminate Cold War nuclear pact - Daily News - Duration: 13:40.

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Pentagon Increases Drone Use On US Soil As US Becomes Police State - Duration: 4:22.

The Pentagon has published new data detailing their domestic drone usage here in the United

States, specifically drone usage for the year 28, and what they've released shows us that

on 11 different occasions, 11, they use their military drones for operations here in the

United States 11 times in one year.

Now you may not think that's a lot, right?

I mean we have 11,000 drones that we use here and abroad and we only had to use them 11

times on our own soil in 12 months.

That's not bad, right?

Well, it actually is.

When you consider that in the entire eight year period prior to 2018, we only use drones

on domestic soil a grand total of 11 times over eight years, but now under trump's direction

at the Pentagon, we've used them 11 times in the last 12 months.

Some of this is innocuous enough.

Okay.

Some of it.

One operation was for monitoring and detailing wildfires in California.

Another one was from monitoring wildfires in Oregon.

One of them was a for Colorado.

Two of them were for hurricane damage surveillance, so there's five.

That means there's six, six military drone operations here in the United States that

we're not just for gathering surveillance on, on damaging things that could harm American

citizens.

Now, some of those six and some of these actually went on for months at a time over five months,

uh, was surveillance of the border.

Yeah, tracking down those illegal immigrants, those alleged caravans just running those

military drones up and down.

They're looking for people that we could go and arrest the remaining missions will.

We still don't have a clear picture of what those were yet.

But let me tell you something.

This is terrifying.

I, this is literally big brother on an airplane.

Big Brother flying over us watching what we're doing

and it gets even worse because last year a former defense secretary, Jim Mattis actually

issued a new memo, changed the rules saying that I, the secretary of defense for the United

States no longer has to be the person to authorize drone missions.

Prior to this memo.

If there was a drone mission, whether it was on us soil or abroad, secretary of defense

had to be the one to issue.

It matters, changed it, and he said, you know what, any high ranking military official can

do it.

You know what?

Let's go a step further to.

Governors of states can now use our military drones at their own discretion.

You got a problem with riots?

Send in the military drone.

Oh, you think there's some civil unrest somewhere?

Send in the military drone.

These things are armed to the teeth.

They've got all kinds of surveillance equipment.

You can just monitor people.

Twenty four slash seven, giving them the illusion of security when in reality we have completely

sacrificed our own freedoms and that's what this is about.

This is a massive civil liberties abuse.

It's taking place at the hands of the trump administration and they want to do it more

frequently and based on what the Pentagon said they did in 2018, it's become obvious

that they are doing it more frequently, which means 2019 this year, I'm willing to bet we

beat that number of 11 domestic missions probably before Halloween of this year.

For more infomation >> Pentagon Increases Drone Use On US Soil As US Becomes Police State - Duration: 4:22.

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HILLARY ANNOUNCED SHE'S LEAVING U S TO BE PRESIDENT - Duration: 17:01.

HILLARY ANNOUNCED SHE'S LEAVING U.S. TO BE PRESIDENT

Hillary Clinton has wanted to be president for decades, and last year she really thought

she would win.

Hillary had the support of the crooked liberal mainstream media, money from George Soros,

celebrity endorsements, and of course, voter fraud galore.

Everything was lined up correctly for Hillary to be crowned but that all changed the moment

Donald Trump stepped onto the scene.

The tough-talking New Yorker dashed Clinton's chances for a presidential win and in the

process also destroyed the Democrat party in a single blow.

For a year, liberals have been pouting over Trump's win, and Hillary Clinton is still

licking her wounds and obsessively whining about losing the election.

And, it appears she is not giving up on her dream of being president even if that means

leaving the country, or planet to be elected.

In the real world when someone starts talking about living in an alternate universe where

they are president, it usually signals that they have had a break with reality, and they

would be taken quickly to a doctor.

Well, that would be a logical solution, though if you are Hillary Clinton and you fantasize

about being president on another planet, it is just laughed off.

In a recent interview with the liberal online publication, Now This, Hillary Clinton sat

down to be interviewed and languished over being president on another planet.

Yeah, you read that correctly.

Hillary Clinton actually sat down and daydreamed about being president on the fictional planet

Earth 2 where she would save the world from Kim Jong-un and how she would handle the supposed

Russian "collusion."

Here is more from The American Mirror:

Hillary Clinton really wants to be president — even if that means blasting off from Earth

to do so.

The failed Democratic candidate recently talked with Now This, a liberal online news outlet,

where she pined for a presidency.

While discussing a variety of topics, Clinton envisioned leaving Earth and venturing Earth

2, where that planet faces the same issues as the actual Earth.

"We went to another planet with Hillary," the caption reads as Clinton and Now This's

Nico Pitney fired off a series of topics.

"People joke about Earth 2, where you are president," he told a giggling Hillary.

On Earth 2's North Korea, Clinton said she would have "full-on diplomatic pressure"

to solve the crisis with the portly dictator Kim Jong-un.

Clinton said if she was in charge, she would be "putting as much money as it took into

enforcing the laws we already have," and added she would want "universal background

checks."

After answering a question about the opioid crisis, a handler attempted to cut off the

interview.

"I fear we have to end it here," a voice off camera said.

"Okay," Pitney responded.

"You want one more?

I'll be short — one more.

Because I like being on Earth 2," Hillary said.

Pitney then asked Clinton what she would do about Russia.

"If I had been president, or on Earth 2, where I am," Hillary said she would have

an "independent commission" look into the alleged Russian "hacking" of the presidential

election.

"I worry about '18.

I worry about 2020 because this is the first time we've even been attacked and not imposed

any real consequences on our adversary," Clinton asserted, ignoring moves by Congressional

Republicans and the Trump administration to impose new sanctions on Russia since the election.

The L.A. Times reported in late October:

The Russian government on Friday accused the United States of displaying "hostility"

as the Trump administration belatedly took the first steps toward imposing new sanctions

to punish Moscow for interfering in the 2016 presidential election.

In early August, after considerable delay and with minimal fanfare, President Trump

signed into law a measure that required the new sanctions, which target individuals and

firms with ties to Russian defense and intelligence agencies.

Under the law, companies that "knowingly engage in a significant transaction" with

people or firms on the list could be subject to U.S. sanctions after Jan. 28.

It appears that Hillary Clinton has lost her mind completely, but no one on the left will

say it in order to save face.

They all know that Hillary Clinton is damaged goods and by her doing these public interviews

and making these outlandish remarks only proves the point more.

Instead of Hillary Clinton retiring and fading off into the distance, she continues to push

her insane conspiracy theories and whine about losing the election.

If she had any sense of decency in her, she would just keep her mouth shut and leave the

American people alone, but that isn't how Hillary works.

Hopefully, one day soon she will officially retire or find another hobby that doesn't

involve politics or activism so we

all

be

left alone in peace.

For more infomation >> HILLARY ANNOUNCED SHE'S LEAVING U S TO BE PRESIDENT - Duration: 17:01.

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US| Not all CEOs make good presidents. These are the ones that do - Duration: 2:13.

US| Not all CEOs make good presidents. These are the ones that do

Ever since Howard Schultz revealed that hes thinking of running for president, many people are revisiting a time honored question: Could a business CEO ever be a good choice for the nations highest office?

But thats not quite the right question, as it lumps together people with very different backgrounds and skill sets. The "CEO/businessperson" category breaks down into at least three major types.

First, there are multinational company CEOs like Rex Tillerson and Carly Fiorina who are products of long careers with steady rises up through bureaucratic hierarchies. Some of them indeed preside over organizations whose economic value, scope of trade and diplomatic issues surpass those of most of the worlds nations.

These people are political animals, and while they may be a little frustrated with governments slow pace and red tape, it really is not that different from what they have faced in traditional organizations. They tend to be smooth, charismatic, diplomatic types who succeed by motivating others, choosing top talent and delegating wisely.

A second, very different group is made up of entrepreneurial CEOs like Ross Perot, recent Senate candidate Linda McMahon, or — for trivia fans — locomotive entrepreneur Peter Cooper in 1876 who may be more likely to think outside the box about policy matters but less capable of building coalitions or containing their disdain for bureaucracy. They often have rough edges and act like loose cannons. These types are really a tough match for government roles because they are used to having a lot of power over their organizations since, after all, they founded them. For the same reasons they arent a fit for corporate situations, they arent fit for government leadership.

Finally, there are the family business scions who inherited their position and have never been fire able. Its a category we could put Steve Forbes, Donald Trump and George W. Bush in, and its made up of wild cards since someone can get to this top dog position without having either of the prior two categories executive upsides. On the other hand, their upbringing can give them the kind of ease in rubbing shoulders with elites that can be such an advantage for members of political dynasties.

So how about Howard Schultz? He has the benefit of being a hybrid of the first two types: a growth and innovation oriented leader who wound up presiding over a complex multinational with both shareholders and a huge workforce to inspire. He might represent exactly the type of businessperson who could be an effective government leader.

Schultz also has that profound advantage of the modern age presidential candidate: no voting record. This contributed to Donald Trumps ability to win the nomination — and also Barack Obamas, given his short Senate tenure and . They could speak in broad, ambiguous ways and different wings of their parties could project on them what they wanted to believe because there was very little in the way of past votes to hang them on.

This relates to another potential advantage: his self positioning as a centrist. The fact that nominees are selected by only those people siding with a party has created dynamics by which the selected nominees are generally those who appeal most to the extremes of their respective parties. Schultzs avowed plan to "run as a centrist independent, outside of the two party system" implies a belief, first, that centrists cannot win party nominations these days and, second, that a centrist nominee would, if nominated, actually have a better chance of winning in a general election.

All this, of course, does not mean that Schultz stands a frappucinos chance in hell of becoming president. As a businessperson who is extremely familiar with the advantages of scale and strict operational standards, he must be acutely aware that he cannot compete as a third party candidate. No one wins without a major party machine working for them on the ground. So we should probably assume that — because he is a strong and creative, strategic thinker — he is aware that he cant win the presidency, and he is instead valuing the chance to get his message out, or the leverage he might gain as a spoiler to influence policy.

What needs to be emphasized most is that we should not use the Trump presidency to reach any conclusion about the advisability of electing a "CEO president." In an era of highly mobile "knowledge workers," the trend is toward corporations becoming more transparent, democratic and imbued with social purpose. Far from the command and control autocrats of the past, these sprawling organizations require who can attract, inspire and empower vast workforces. Effective business executives have the basic skill set for political leadership. Schultz may not get far as a candidate, but he wont be the last business executive to make a run for it.

For more infomation >> US| Not all CEOs make good presidents. These are the ones that do - Duration: 2:13.

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Iran RAGES at Trump for trying to topple Venezuela's Maduro - 'the US wants hegemony!' - Duration: 5:30.

 Iran President Hassan Rouhani said Washington was seeking "world hegemony" by suppressing independent countries, Tehran's state news agency reported

This latest attack comes as the US ratchets up the pressure on Venezuelan leader Maduro as part of an effort to replace him with opposition leader and self-declared interim president Juan Guaido

Following a meeting with Venezuela's new envoy in Tehran, Rouhani said: "The Americans are basically against all popular revolutions and independent countries and seek world hegemony by suppressing them

" Related articles War 3: Furious Iran taunts US with new cruise missile  Relations between Iran and the US have soured since President Trump announced he was pulling Washington out of a 215 nuclear accord and reimposing sanctions

 And the situation in Venezuela has strained relations even further as the rival nations throw their weight behind opposing sides in the rapidly escalating crisis

 Alongside Russia and China, Iran supports Maduro while the US and most of South America has demanded he step down

 Meanwhile, the Islamic Republic today risked further provoking Washington by showing off a new cruise missile

 READ MORE: Venezuela crisis: Foreign invasion, military coup or status quo - What's next for Maduro?  Related articles War 3: Iranian crowds chant 'DEATH TO AMERICA'  Tehran says the weapon can hit targets 8 miles away which puts its regional rival Saudi Arabia well within range

 Iran has continued to expand its missile programme, particularly its ballistic missiles, despite repeated warnings from the United States

 Defence Minister Amir Hatami said during the unveiling ceremony: "This cruise missile needs a very short time for its preparedness and can fly at a low altitude

" However, Western experts say Iran often exaggerates the capabilities of its weapons

 In January, Tehran tried to launch a satellite into space but the rocket failed to reach orbit

 Washington has warned Iran not to attempt further tests fearing that the same technology used to blast a satellite into space could be adapted to produce long-range ballistic missiles

 Tehran insists its space programme, a source of national pride, is purely for peaceful purposes

 In addition to concerns over Iran's ballistic missiles, the US is also keeping a close eye on its nuclear programme

   Officials in Tehran announced this week they were preparing to step up their production of enriched uranium

 The radioactive element is used as fuel for nuclear power but can also be further refined to create material for atomic weapons

 President Trump this week warned Iran remains a "source of potential danger and conflict" but his intelligence chiefs said Tehran is not working to create a nuclear weapon

For more infomation >> Iran RAGES at Trump for trying to topple Venezuela's Maduro - 'the US wants hegemony!' - Duration: 5:30.

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Pompeo pulls U.S. out of Cold War era nuclear treaty which took missiles out of Europe - Duration: 29:30.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo  announced Friday that the U.S.will no longer comply with a landmark nuclear treaty with Russia, beginning as soon as Saturday

Pompeo says the U.S.will suspend its obligations to the treaty on Saturday.If Russia doesn't come into compliance, the treaty 'will terminate,' he said

Speaking at the State Department Friday, Pompeo said: 'For years Russia has violated the terms of the intermediate range nuclear forces treaty without remorse

'Russia has refused to take any steps to return real and verifiable compliance over these 60 days

The United States will therefore suspend its obligations under the INF treaty effective February 2nd

' In a statement issued on Friday, Trump suggested ties could improve markedly if Russia were willing to compromise on arms control, saying all sides must live up to such agreements

'We stand ready to engage with Russia on arms control negotiations .and, importantly, once that is done, develop, perhaps for the first time ever, an outstanding relationship on economic, trade, political, and military levels,' he said

The Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces Treaty, known as INF, bans the U.S.and Russia from having ground-launched missiles with ranges from 315 miles to 3,415 miles

The move could lead to the U.S.developing new nuclear weapons of the type which were stationed in Europe in the 1980s to huge public controversy - and potentially stationing them on the continent again

A senior official cited prior U.S.efforts to negotiate with Russia.'We have had a series of discussions at the highest levels,' the official said

'There was even an effort to arrange at highest level, President Putin and President Trump, that President Trump made the decision to cancel because of Russia's absolutely unlawful and flagrant violation of international law with respect to the of seizing 24 Ukrainian sailors,' the official said, referencing the cancelled formal meeting in Buenos Aires

Pompeo said the U.S.had fully adhered to the treaty for three decades.'But we will not remain constrained by its terms while Russia misrepresents its actions

We cannot be the only country in the world unilaterally bound by this treaty, or any other,' the nation's top diplomat added

Administration officials say the U.S.has made 35 diplomatic engagements with Russia to try to get it to come into compliance with the treaty

In theory it could come back into compliance during the review period, but U.S.officials are not predicting it will

'Russia will have this chance if they are truly interested in preserving the treaty, this is their final chance,' a senior administration official said during a briefing call with reporters Friday

'They know what they do.They know what they're doing is a violation,' said a senior administration official, dismissing Russia's denials

The U.S.side called off that formal meeting in protest of Russia's firing on Ukrainian vessels in the Kerch Straight incident

However, it was revealed this week that Trump and Putin did meet privately in Buenos Aires, speaking for up to 15 minutes, the Financial Times reported, citing a Russian government official

However the report did not state that they spoke about the missile treaty.A few hours before Pompeo's announcement, the NATO Western security alliance issued a statement saying it would "fully support" the U

S.withdrawal notice.Speaking before Pompeo's announcement, German Chancellor Angela Merkel emphasized the importance of using the six months window to keep talking

In the U.S.senator Bob Menendez, the senior Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, accused Trump failing to grasp the importance of arms control treaties or of having a wider strategy to control the spread of nuclear weapons

'Today´s withdrawal is yet another geo-strategic gift to Vladimir Putin,' he said

In Russia there was no immediate official response form the Kremin.'America really wants to develop new weapons systems which are in breach of this treaty,' Konstantin Kosachyov, senior Russian lawmaker, wrote on social media, saying the alleged Russian violation of the treaty had been a convenient pretext

The Trump administration had forecast its withdrawal from the 1987 pact, citing concerns that Russia wasn't honoring it and that it didn't include China, which has engaged in its own missile program

The move is to be communicated to Russia and former states that made up the Soviet Union on Saturday

The formal move kicks in a 60-day period, which will be followed by a six-month period to withdraw from the landmark Cold War agreement

Leaving the treaty would allow the U.S.to develop longer-range conventional land-based missiles than it currently has - but which China is  currently developing because it was not part of the banning treaty

The treaty was signed in 1987 as a breakthrough in reducing nuclear tensions.It banned the U

S.and the then Soviet Union from having any medium-range ground-based missiles, whether nuclear or conventional, which led to the U

S.getting rid of its nuclear land-based cruise and Pershing II missiles - although it left long-range missiles intact

The treaty banned such ground-based weapons with a range of 310 to 3,400 miles Public protests greeted the medium-range missiles being stationed in Europe and the Soviets saw them as an escalation of Cold War tensions

Russia claims it is not in breach of the agreement.The pact has stood since then but in 2017 the U

S.accused Russia of flouting the pact by developing and deploying a new nuclear missile with a range of 1,500 miles

Russia denies that its Novator 9M729 is in breach of the treaty and claims that its range is within the pact's limits at 300 miles, but the U

S.says that it has been test fired over the far longer range.Russia accuses the U

S.of using the claims as a pretext to get out of the treaty and rejected demands to destroy its missile system

U.S.Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security Andrea Thompson on Thursday held last-ditch talks with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov in Beijing ahead of the expiration of a U

S.60-day deadline for Moscow to come back into compliance with the treaty.Thompson and Ryabkov, who met on the sidelines of a 'P5' meeting of nuclear powers - the U

S, Russia, China, France and the UK -  said afterwards that the two countries had failed to bridge their differences

In an interview, Thompson said she expected Washington to now stop complying with the treaty as soon as this weekend, a move she said would allow the U

S.military to immediately begin developing its own longer-range missiles if it chose to do so, raising the prospect they could be deployed in Europe

'We´ll be able to do that (suspend our treaty obligations) on Feb.2,' Thompson told Reuters

'We'll have an announcement made, follow all the steps that need to be taken on the treaty to suspend our obligations with the intent to withdraw

' The formal withdrawal process, once announced, takes six months.Stopping compliance with the treaty would untie the U

S.military's hands, she said.'We are then also able to conduct the R&D and work on the systems we haven't been able to use because we've been in compliance with the treaty,' said Thompson

'Come February 2, this weekend, if DoD (the U.S.Department of Defense) chooses to do that, they´ll be able to do that

' Washington remained open to further talks with Moscow about the treaty regardless, she added

Nuclear weapons experts at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace said in a statement this week that while Russia's violation of the INF treaty is a serious problem, U

S.withdrawal under current circumstances would be counterproductive.'Leaving the INF treaty will unleash a new missile competition between the United States and Russia,' they said

Kingston Reif, director for disarmament at the Arms Control Association, said Thursday the Trump administration has failed to exhaust diplomatic options to save the treaty

What's more, 'it has no strategy to prevent Russia from building and fielding even more intermediate-range missiles in the absence of the agreement

' Reif said the period between now and August, when the U.S.withdrawal would take effect, offers a last chance to save the treaty, but he sees little prospect of that happening

He argues that John Bolton, the national security adviser to President Donald Trump, is 'unlikely to miss the opportunity to kill an agreement he has long despised

' Ryabkov said Moscow would continue working to try to reach agreement despite the failure of the talks, but accused Washington of ignoring Russian complaints about U

S.missiles and of adopting what he called a destructive position.'Unfortunately, there is no progress,' Rybakov said

Ryabkov called the US position 'rather tough, ultimatum-like' and 'destructive,' state news agency RIA Novosti reported

'We have not made any progress.We state this not just with sorrow, but with deep concern for the fate of the treaty, for the fate of European and international security,' Ryabkov said

During the conference with the other Security Council nations in Beijing, Ryabkov said bilateral dialogue was stalling on certain topics as one party was 'intentionally' refusing to pursue discussions - a thinly veiled reference to the United States

'Russia can't be blamed for anything.We are always ready for dialogue on all topics, including the most difficult current issues, and to be fully transparent

We expect our partners to take the same approach,' he said.Last week the Russian military displayed the nuclear-capable 9M729 missile system to the media and foreign military officials in an attempt to prove the weapon does not violate the treaty

Russia says the missile's maximum range is 480 kilometers (300 miles) and within the allowed range

Washington has however said a static display of the cruise missile does not prove its range does not breach the agreement

It ended a dangerous build-up of warheads in Europe but there are fears a similar situation could re-emerge

At the height of the Cold War, the U.S.had as many as 7,000 warheads deployed in Europe

However the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a Washington D.C.based think tank, now estimates that there are far fewer - 150 nuclear warheads, all of them on air-dropped unguided bombs

They are held in Belgium, Germany, Turkey, Italy and the Netherlands, the NTI reported

The INF did not ban long-range Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles.The U.S.has an arsenal of Minuteman missiles ready to launch from missile silos in Montana, North Dakota and Wyoming

But Russian concerns center on the possibility of the U.S.using bases in Poland to deploy short- to medium-range nuclear missiles

Poland has both asked the U.S.for a permanent presence, and allowed the U.S.to build a ground-based missile defense shield using Aegis technology

BreakingDefense.com reported that the Russians have claimed that the Aegis firing mechanism is essentially the same as the one used to launch Tomahawk conventional missiles from shops, and could be adapted to be turned into an offensive rather than defensive system

Russia itself has deployed short-range nuclear-capable rockets on its border with Poland in Kaliningrad

Their range of under 300 miles makes them compatible with the INF.The other source of U

S.concern over the treaty has been that it allowed China to develop the missile systems

HOW U.S.MISSILES LED TO PROTEST IN  EUROPE IN THE 1980s - AND TOOK THE WORLD CLOSE TO THE NUCLEAR BRINK  Both the U

S.and the Soviets expected that if they went to war, Europe would be their battleground

By the early 1980s, the U.S.under Ronald Reagan was outspending the Soviets and introducing dramatically improved new weapons in the air and on the ground

In particular, the Soviet SS-20 medium-range nuclear missiles, launched from mobile carriers, were seen as the biggest threat to NATO forces if there were to be an exchange of weapons

Nuclear missiles which could match their destructive power were a priority and the Pershing II was developed which could destroy underground bunkers and silos and reach Soviet territory in just six minutes - making them both undetectable and capable of largely killing off the Soviet ability to respond

But moving the missiles into the places where they would be used in battle created a whole new dimension of conflict for the U

S.and its NATO allies - this time with peace protesters who made their deployment the focus of their rage

Target: The land-based nuclear cruise missiles brought to the UK sparked public protests when they were deployed to the USAF base at Greenham Common west of London in 1983 Women's protests: Women formed a peace camp at Greenham Common from the time it was identified as the host for the cruise and Pershing missiles and remained there long afterwards

In December 1982 one of their protests was a human chain around its perimeter Blocking tactic: Anti nuclear protesters from the Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp tried to stop cruise missiles arriving by stopping access to its main gates Beginning in 1983, two deployments  in particular were to become infamous flashpoints

In the UK, the U.S.Air Force base at Greenham Common, Berkshire, to the west of London, would be used for 160 medium-range nuclear cruise missiles, and a smaller number of Pershing II rockets

RAF Molesworth in Cambridgeshire would receive 64 cruise missiles.In Germany, three bases - Neu-Ulm, Mutlangen and Neckarsulm - would receive a total of 108 Pershing IIs

But in both countries the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament launched huge and widespread protests

Focus: The Perishing II missile was deployed in 1983 to German bases in the face of huge public anger, with demonstrations of hundreds of thousands who saw it as a threat to West Germany's existence Cold war welcome: In West Germany there were protests regularly against the missiles and their deployment

They entered active duty in 1983 and by 1987 a deal for their destruction was done In Germany, Mutlangen became the focal point, while in Greenham Common, a peace camp of women against nuclear weapons sprang up at the perimeter

Attempts to move munitions were met with sit-down protests on roads outside.In Bonn, then the capital of West Germany, as many as 400,000 people took part in one anti-Pershing protest, part of a day of demonstrations across Europe, while other protests saw a human chain from U

S.headquarters in Stuttgart to the gates of Mutlangen.1983 also saw one of the most dangerous moments of the Cold War when NATO's Able Archer war games, which involved activating troops and giving dummy instructions to fire nuclear weapons, were misunderstood by the Soviets

Soviet threat: An SS-20 preserved in Russia shows the weapon which the Pershing II and cruise missiles were designed to counter

The SS-20 rocket launched multiple warheads and could reach all of Western Europe from Soviet-controlled territory including East Germany They thought the exercise was really preparations for a first strike with the new Pershing arsenal part of the plan

The Soviets ordered its nuclear arsenal to be prepared for action and placed bombers on high alert

If NATO forces under U.S.command had moved to an increased state of readiness, the Soviets could well have launched their own nuclear weapons

Spy Oleg Gordiesky later wrote an account of the tense moments, which ended when Able Archer concluded on November 11 1983

What peace protesters had not realized was that behind the scenes, the U.S.had made an offer in the late 1970s to the Soviets, that if it agreed to get rid of its SS-20s, the U

S, would withdraw the Pershings and the cruise missiles.By 1986, the Soviet Union was lead by Mikhail Gorbachev, and a deal began to take shape

By September 1987, the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty was signed by Reagan and Gorbachev in Washington D

C.It eliminated all the weapons being protested against in the space of four years, leaving just a handful of mementos in museums

Now however, its future appears doomed.A Russian fighter jet has been filmed forcing a US F-15 to turn away and change course by flying dangerously close to the American aircraft

In footage circulating on Russian social media, the Su-27 fighter comes into frame and makes a sharp left to bank across the F-15 from the side

The US-made plane has no choice but to move out of the way as the Russian jet came within feet of hitting it

The Pentagon said that a Russian jet came dangerously close to one of its fighters over the Black Sea on Monday

It said the Russian aircraft intercepted a US Navy patrol plane in international airspace, coming within five feet of the American plane, according to CBS

Pentagon spokeswoman Captain Pamela Kunze said the Russian plane flew close to the plane for two hours and 40 minutes before crossing directly into its flight path

It's not known if it was the same incident shown in the footage, or just the latest in a series of close calls between Russian and U

S.aircraft over the Black Sea.The 40-second clip was uploaded to Twitter on Thursday but it's not known where the altercation took place

Commenters on social media claimed the manoeuvre was executed over the Baltic Sea as a part of a Baltic Air-policing mission

For more infomation >> Pompeo pulls U.S. out of Cold War era nuclear treaty which took missiles out of Europe - Duration: 29:30.

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US| Dozens of CHP officers suspected of faking overtime . officials say supervisors were complicit - Duration: 1:27.

US| Dozens of CHP officers suspected of faking overtime . officials say supervisors were complicit

Dozens of California Highway Patrol officers are being temporarily relieved of duty amid an investigation into whether they fraudulently received hundreds of hours of overtime pay while working out of the East Los Angeles station, officials said Friday.

The probe found evidence that some officers exaggerated the number of hours they worked in protection details for Caltrans workers doing freeway maintenance. for this type of work. The job typically involves sitting in a cruiser at each end of a construction zone to ensure motorists dont get too close to the workers.

Authorities expressed shock and disappointment at the scope of the alleged misconduct by law enforcement officials, saying it extended beyond officers to higher level managers.

Our supervisors were complicit in this, said Chief Mark Garrett, who oversees the CHP Southern Division. I am extremely disheartened by the actions of these employees.

The fraudulent overtime was worth about dollar 360,000, the investigation found. The East L.A. station allocated about dollar 2.5 million for reimbursable overtime during the two year period covered by the investigation, officials said.

I am frankly angered and appalled by the actions of those involved, CHP Commissioner Warren Stanley said in a statement Friday. Let me be clear, the CHP does not tolerate misconduct by any of its employees. The moment CHP management discovered the potential misconduct, we immediately launched an investigation.

The CHP has begun sharing its findings with the Los Angeles County district attorneys office, which will determine whether criminal fraud charges will be filed. As of Friday afternoon, a formal criminal complaint had not been filed.

Garrett said a review of overtime processes last March uncovered irregularities, including some officers taking overtime for hours they did not work. He said there were ringleaders inside the station who were behind the scheme, which he said goes back at least two years, but did not elaborate.

Garrett said that he could not say how many officers were involved but that numerous members of the East Los Angeles station are the subject of the investigation. The station comprises 99 officers and 10 sergeants.

He declined to say whether any officers had confessed to their involvement in the scheme, citing the ongoing investigation.

The California Assn. of Highway Patrolmen issued a statement Friday regarding the investigation.

On behalf of the 14,000 men and women who make up [our] membership, were saddened by these allegations against employees of the California Highway Patrol, the statement said. This ongoing investigation serves as a reminder to us all of the important bond of trust we share with the public we serve and the importance of carrying out our duties with the integrity expected of our profession.

Ed Obayashi, a deputy sheriff and legal advisor for Plumas County who teaches law enforcement ethics, said the scale of the alleged fraud was significant.

It doesnt happen that often in law enforcement, he said. This undermines public confidence. Next to planting evidence, this is the worst.

If it is proved the officers have taken money without work, they could face fraud, conspiracy and theft of public funds charges. And if they are found to have lied, prosecutors must reveal that behavior in any criminal cases in which the officers may testify.

Dishonesty is the lowest offense for officers, Obayashi said. You lie, you die career wise. Everyone proven to have faked their timecards here, it is a career ending incident.

Officials examined records from the states 103 CHP stations, and the improper activity appears to be confined to the Southern Division, Stanley said.

Garrett said that once the discrepancies were discovered, the agency immediately initiated an investigation to further identify any employees who betrayed the trust of the public and their fellow members of the CHP.

The chief said the agency has since altered its overtime practices to prevent further abuses. Garrett said any deviation from the new regulations would require his personal approval.

So many officers are under scrutiny that CHP is shifting extra staffers to the Southern Division, which patrols the Los Angeles area, sources told The Times.

California Department of Transportation crews working on freeways face dangers from motorists who speed past. There have been numerous public outreach efforts and stricter traffic laws

Scores of Caltrans employees have been killed and hundreds have been injured in the line of duty, most of them

Garrett said Caltrans was assisting in the CHP investigation. But it was unclear whether Caltrans has launched its own investigation into the suspected overtime fraud.

For more infomation >> US| Dozens of CHP officers suspected of faking overtime . officials say supervisors were complicit - Duration: 1:27.

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US| Snowball fight descends into chaos P0lice fire paintball guns at students Daily Mail Online - Duration: 1:20.

US| Snowball fight descends into chaos P0lice fire paintball guns at students Daily Mail Online

Footage has emerged of police officer firing pepper spray bombs into a crowd of students during after a gathering in the snow descended into chaos.

The video, which was posted on , depicts police officers near a salt truck using modified paintball guns to blast the pepper spray at West Virginia University students crowded around a few houses on North Spruce Street. 

Police said the crowd were consuming alcohol openly, sledding, snowboarding and blocking the roadway, reports.

School officials told the crowd to move so snow plows and salt trucks could get down the street, and Morgantown Police officers tried to escort a plow down the street in order to get pedestrians off the road.

 We had winter sports activities that turned into criminal behavior and violence," Preston told the Athenaeum. They started attacking city workers as they plowed the streets.

Three police officers deployed pepper ball munitions into a crowd of students in Spruce Street 

Several hundred students had gathered for a snow fight and then  refused instructions by police to disperse 

Police say three officers deployed pepper ball munitions, targeting the building above the people throwing projectiles so the balls would disintegrate on the building and the powder would fall onto the crowd.

They say the officers were trying to cover the retreat of other workers and officers in the area.

According to police, the incident was declared a riot around 3.50pm and officers ordered the crowd to disperse.

When the crowd failed to do so, officers issued a second notice to disperse, but the crowd again refused.

Police say officers then deployed a Long Range Acoustic Device, which is a directional loud speaker that emits a steady annoying noise.

At that time, some members of the crowd set a fire with debris in the middle of the street.

Officers deployed the Long Range Acoustic Device in a different direction and a large portion of the crowd began to disperse.

One student seen in the video performs the hands up gesture while standing behind a pair of officers.

Two smoke grenade rounds were then fired on the street. The remaining crowd dispersed at that time.

WVU University Relations/Communications Director of News April Kaull said the escalation began when several hundred students instructions to disperse and began tossing glass bottles and other debris toward officers.

A statement posted on Twitter from April Kaull read: It is unfortunate that what began today on Spruce Street as a playful time in the snow turned into a dangerous and threatening situation for students and law enforcement officers alike.

The escalation apparently began when the several hundred students and others who had gathered refused reasonable instructions to disperse and began tossing glass bottles and other debris toward officers, resulting in law enforcement taking action. 

One student tweeted an image of one of the officers with a device deploying pepper ball munitions

The officers are seen firing straight ahead and then to the right as the crowd watches them 

The crowd of students can be seen crouching down as the police officers fire at them 

Morgantown Mayor Bill Kawecki told that he is unsure what started the incident.

 But he said a mattress or some other object was set on fire, and bottles and beer cans were thrown at workers as they responded. 

The situation then escalated to the point that law enforcement had to become involved, according to the mayor.

Students got a little too jovial, and Im afraid got carried away.

Its unfortunate that they couldnt simply enjoy the snow without turning it into some circumstance where people were in danger.  

West Virginia University later tweeted a statement about the incident and said it will review the video footage 

As near as I can tell, the university isnt taking it very well, either.

University officials plan to review videos of the incident to determine if any charges should be filed.

We remind our students that our actions should represent our Mountaineer values,the WVU statement added. 

Behave responsibly, be accountable and please comply with police, who want to keep our campus, city and all of our first responders safe through this weather. 

WVU classes have been canceled since Wednesday afternoon because of the polar vortex that engulfed much of the United States, sending wind chill temperatures plunging to 25 degrees below zero in some locations.

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For more infomation >> US| Snowball fight descends into chaos P0lice fire paintball guns at students Daily Mail Online - Duration: 1:20.

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Putin says Russia will follow US and withdraw from Cold War-era nuclear pact, says Trump is immature - Duration: 17:20.

President Vladimir Putin says he is suspending Russian participation in a landmark Cold War-era missile treaty in response to the US announcement yesterday

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced Friday that the US would no longer comply with the treaty which kept intermediate range missiles out of Europe, beginning as soon as Saturday

Not to be outdone Putin stated today: 'Our American partners have announced they are suspending their participation in the deal, and we are also suspending our participation

' He continued: 'We will wait until our partners have matured enough to conduct an equal, meaningful dialogue with us on this important topic

' Putin made the statement at a televised meeting with foreign and defence ministers Sergei Lavrov and Sergei Shoigu that Russia would no longer initiate talks with the US on disarmament

Putin also said that Russia will start working on creating new missiles, including supersonic ones

Pompeo threatened on Friday America would 'terminate' the treaty by Saturday if Russia did not come into compliance with it

Speaking at the State Department he said: 'For years Russia has violated the terms of the intermediate range nuclear forces treaty without remorse

'Russia has refused to take any steps to return real and verifiable compliance over these 60 days

'The United States will therefore suspend its obligations under the INF treaty effective February 2nd

' But Moscow has long insisted it does not violate the agreement, and last month invited reporters and foreign military attaches to a briefing on the disputed weapons system

Lavrov on Saturday repeated Russian accusations that Washington itself has been in violation of the deal for many years

At the meeting, Putin said Russia would seek to develop medium-range missiles in response to what he said were similar projects in the US

But he told the ministers that Russia would 'not be drawn into a costly new arms race'

Russia would only deploy intermediate- and short-range missiles in Europe or elsewhere in answer to similar moves from the US, he added

Putin has previously threatened to develop nuclear missiles banned under the INF treaty if it is scrapped

European leaders have voiced fears over the consequences of the treaty's demise and called on Russia to address concerns before the United States formally leaves in August

Signed in 1987 towards the end of the Cold War by then US president Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, the treaty bans ground-launched missiles with a range of between 315 miles to 3,415 miles

The deal resolved a crisis over Soviet nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles targeting Western capitals, but put no restrictions on other major military actors such as China

In a statement issued on Friday, Trump suggested ties could improve markedly if Russia were willing to compromise on arms control, saying all sides must live up to such agreements

'We stand ready to engage with Russia on arms control negotiations .and, importantly, once that is done, develop, perhaps for the first time ever, an outstanding relationship on economic, trade, political, and military levels,' he said

But the withdrawal could lead to the U.S.developing new nuclear weapons of the type which were stationed in Europe in the 1980s to huge public controversy - and potentially stationing them on the continent again

A senior official cited prior US efforts to negotiate with Russia.'We have had a series of discussions at the highest levels,' the official said

'There was even an effort to arrange at highest level, President Putin and President Trump, that President Trump made the decision to cancel because of Russia's absolutely unlawful and flagrant violation of international law with respect to the of seizing 24 Ukrainian sailors,' the official said, referencing the cancelled formal meeting in Buenos Aires

The US side called off that formal meeting in protest of Russia's firing on Ukrainian vessels in the Kerch Straight incident

However, it was revealed this week that Trump and Putin did meet privately in Buenos Aires, speaking for up to 15 minutes, the Financial Times reported, citing a Russian government official

The report did not state that they spoke about the missile treaty.A few hours before Pompeo's announcement, the NATO Western security alliance issued a statement saying it would 'fully support' the US withdrawal notice

Speaking before Pompeo's announcement, German Chancellor Angela Merkel emphasized the importance of using the six months window to keep talking

Senator Bob Menendez, the senior Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, accused Trump failing to grasp the importance of arms control treaties or of having a wider strategy to control the spread of nuclear weapons

'Today´s withdrawal is yet another geo-strategic gift to Vladimir Putin,' he said

'America really wants to develop new weapons systems which are in breach of this treaty,' Konstantin Kosachyov, senior Russian lawmaker, wrote on social media yesterday, saying the alleged Russian violation of the treaty had been a convenient pretext

The Trump administration had forecast its withdrawal from the 1987 pact, citing concerns that Russia wasn't honoring it and that it didn't include China, which has engaged in its own missile program

America's exit kicks in within a 60-day period, which will be followed by a six-month period to withdraw from the landmark Cold War agreement

Leaving the treaty would allow the U.S.to develop longer-range conventional land-based missiles than it currently has - but which China is  currently developing because it was not part of the banning treaty

The treaty was signed in 1987 as a breakthrough in reducing nuclear tensions.It banned the U

S.and the then Soviet Union from having ground-based missiles, whether nuclear or conventional, which led to the US getting rid of its nuclear land-based cruise and Pershing II missiles

Public protests greeted the missiles being stationed in Europe and the Soviets saw them as an escalation of Cold War tensions

HOW U.S.MISSILES LED TO PROTEST IN  EUROPE IN THE 1980s - AND TOOK THE WORLD CLOSE TO THE NUCLEAR BRINK  Both the U

S.and the Soviets expected that if they went to war, Europe would be their battleground

By the early 1980s, the U.S.under Ronald Reagan was outspending the Soviets and introducing dramatically improved new weapons in the air and on the ground

In particular, the Soviet SS-20 medium-range nuclear missiles, launched from mobile carriers, were seen as the biggest threat to NATO forces if there were to be an exchange of weapons

Nuclear missiles which could match their destructive power were a priority and the Pershing II was developed which could destroy underground bunkers and silos and reach Soviet territory in just six minutes - making them both undetectable and capable of largely killing off the Soviet ability to respond

But moving the missiles into the places where they would be used in battle created a whole new dimension of conflict for the U

S.and its NATO allies - this time with peace protesters who made their deployment the focus of their rage

Target: The land-based nuclear cruise missiles brought to the UK sparked public protests when they were deployed to the USAF base at Greenham Common west of London in 1983 Women's protests: Women formed a peace camp at Greenham Common from the time it was identified as the host for the cruise and Pershing missiles and remained there long afterwards

In December 1982 one of their protests was a human chain around its perimeter Blocking tactic: Anti nuclear protesters from the Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp tried to stop cruise missiles arriving by stopping access to its main gates Beginning in 1983, two deployments  in particular were to become infamous flashpoints

In the UK, the U.S.Air Force base at Greenham Common, Berkshire, to the west of London, would be used for 160 medium-range nuclear cruise missiles, and a smaller number of Pershing II rockets

RAF Molesworth in Cambridgeshire would receive 64 cruise missiles.In Germany, three bases - Neu-Ulm, Mutlangen and Neckarsulm - would receive a total of 108 Pershing IIs

But in both countries the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament launched huge and widespread protests

Focus: The Perishing II missile was deployed in 1983 to German bases in the face of huge public anger, with demonstrations of hundreds of thousands who saw it as a threat to West Germany's existence Cold war welcome: In West Germany there were protests regularly against the missiles and their deployment

They entered active duty in 1983 and by 1987 a deal for their destruction was done In Germany, Mutlangen became the focal point, while in Greenham Common, a peace camp of women against nuclear weapons sprang up at the perimeter

Attempts to move munitions were met with sit-down protests on roads outside.In Bonn, then the capital of West Germany, as many as 400,000 people took part in one anti-Pershing protest, part of a day of demonstrations across Europe, while other protests saw a human chain from U

S.headquarters in Stuttgart to the gates of Mutlangen.1983 also saw one of the most dangerous moments of the Cold War when NATO's Able Archer war games, which involved activating troops and giving dummy instructions to fire nuclear weapons, were misunderstood by the Soviets

Soviet threat: An SS-20 preserved in Russia shows the weapon which the Pershing II and cruise missiles were designed to counter

The SS-20 rocket launched multiple warheads and could reach all of Western Europe from Soviet-controlled territory including East Germany They thought the exercise was really preparations for a first strike with the new Pershing arsenal part of the plan

The Soviets ordered its nuclear arsenal to be prepared for action and placed bombers on high alert

If NATO forces under U.S.command had moved to an increased state of readiness, the Soviets could well have launched their own nuclear weapons

Spy Oleg Gordiesky later wrote an account of the tense moments, which ended when Able Archer concluded on November 11 1983

What peace protesters had not realized was that behind the scenes, the U.S.had made an offer in the late 1970s to the Soviets, that if it agreed to get rid of its SS-20s, the U

S, would withdraw the Pershings and the cruise missiles.By 1986, the Soviet Union was lead by Mikhail Gorbachev, and a deal began to take shape

By September 1987, the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty was signed by Reagan and Gorbachev in Washington D

C.It eliminated all the weapons being protested against in the space of four years, leaving just a handful of mementos in museums

For more infomation >> Putin says Russia will follow US and withdraw from Cold War-era nuclear pact, says Trump is immature - Duration: 17:20.

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Putin says Russia will follow US and withdraw from nuclear deal - Duration: 2:32.

 Russian president Vladimir Putin has said Russia will follow the US and pull out of a Cold War-era nuclear weapons treaty

 Mr Putin said Russia's withdrawal would take place within six months.  America's secretary of state Mike Pompeo announced yesterday that he was suspending compliance with the treaty, with a threat to pull out completely in six months

Russian President Vladimir Putin says Russia will follow the US and withdraw from the treaty (Picture: ITAR-TASS News) Mr Pompeo gave Russia a final chance to save the deal, adding: 'Countries must be held accountable for their actions.' Paedophile who 'confessed to killing JonBenet Ramsey wanted to eat her' However Mr Putin has hit back during a meeting with foreign and defence ministers this morning

 'The American partners have declared that they suspend their participation in the deal, we suspend it as well,' he said

 He added Russia would start work on creating new missiles, including hypersonic ones, and told ministers not to initiate disarmament talks with Washington

Advertisement Advertisement  'We have repeatedly, during a number of years, and constantly, raised a question about substantiative talks on the disarmament issue,' Mr Putin said

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced yesterday that the US was suspending compliance with the treaty (Picture: Rex Features) Vladimir Putin also announced that the country would build new missiles (Picture: Reuters) 'We see, that in the past few years the partners have not supported our initiatives.'  Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov accused the US of an 'outright violation' of the treaty and other arms deals

 Putin also added that Russia would not be drawn into a costly arms race and it will not deploy its weapons in Europe and other regions unless the United States did so first

 NATO has already said it 'fully supports' the US, adding: 'Allies regret that Russia, as part of its broader pattern of behaviour, continues to deny its INF Treaty violation, refuses to provide any credible response, and has taken no demonstrable steps toward returning to full and verifiable compliance.'  The treaty was signed toward the end of the Cold War between presidents Mikhail Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan

 It banned ground-launched missiles with a range between 500 and 5,500km. Got a story for Metro.co.uk?  If you have a story for our news team, email us at webnews@metro.co.uk

 You can also follow us on Facebook and Twitter. Advertisement Advertisement

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