Air Force Gen. John Hyten, commander of U.S. Strategic Command, said Tuesday he is “reviewing” the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, underscoring the Defense Department’s focus on addressing Russia’s violation of the 1987 accord.
U.S. officials in February said Russia has deployed a ground-launched nuclear-capable cruise missile and that the administration plans potential responses to the INF breach. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) said Tuesday during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing that the development “calls into question basic assumptions about U.S. nuclear policy – assumptions we must be prepared to re-evaluate given the new realities of our strategic environment.”
Hyten said the breach “is a concern to us because we have not seen that for quite some time.” The Pentagon’s upcoming Nuclear Posture Review, which is expected to be completed in six months, will consider military response options to Russia’s violation. The administration’s priorities for this review, Hyten said, will be based on an assessment of the threat scenarios from Russia, China, North Korea, and Iran.
“A single ground-launched cruise missile is not a significant threat to the United States or our allies. It shows the beginning of a deployment of a structure that could be a threat in the future,” Hyten said. However, if deployed in a significant number, such a cruise missile would threaten most of Europe, he said: “We have no defense for it, especially in defense of our European allies.”
“I am reviewing the INF agreement,” Hyten said, indicating that the U.S. might take a different approach toward the treaty. He noted, however, that he has not been directed to review or consider changing the U.S. approach toward the U.S.-Russian New START treaty.
He spoke in support of the nuclear arsenal limits set by New START and said the agreement gives each country a helpful understanding of the other’s capabilities. “We get huge value from a bilateral, verifiable treaty that allows us to see exactly what our adversaries are doing from a strategic weapons perspective,” Hyten said