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Putin Says He Offered to Sell Trump Russia’s Newest Missiles

Russia ready to share hypersonic missiles, Putin says.

Putin Says He Offered to Sell Trump Russia’s Newest Missiles
U.S. President Donald Trump, left, and Vladimir Putin, Russia’s President, center, arrive for a news conference in Helsinki, Finland. (Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- President Vladimir Putin said he’d offered to sell Donald Trump Russia’s latest weapons, including hypersonic missile systems, as part of efforts to revive strategic arms talks with the U.S.

The question of how to include Russia’s new weapons in any arms agreement was raised at talks with the U.S. president during the Group of 20 summit in Japan in June, Putin said Thursday at the Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok.

Putin Says He Offered to Sell Trump Russia’s Newest Missiles

“I told Donald, ‘if you want, we’ll sell them to you and that’s how we keep everything balanced right away’,” Putin said at the plenary session also attended by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Indian Premier Narendra Modi. While the U.S. side argued it would soon have such weapons, Putin said “why waste money when we have already spent it and we can get something for it that doesn’t harm our security?”

The U.S. hasn’t responded to his offer and “remains silent” on Russian proposals to reduce the arms race, Putin said, after the collapse last month of the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces treaty that banned short- and medium-range missiles. The 2010 New START treaty limiting the U.S. and Russian strategic arsenals is the only nuclear weapons agreement between the two powers still in force, and it’s due to expire early in 2021.

Putin said another option would be to agree on methods of counting Russia’s new weapons in overall arms agreements. The U.S. conducted a flight test of a new intermediate-range cruise missile on Aug. 18, two weeks after withdrawing from the INF treaty. Putin last year showed off a series of new Russian weapons that he said could evade any U.S. missile-defense shield, in response to the American withdrawal from the 2002 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty.

Russia sparked international concern last month when a deadly blast at a remote military facility caused a spike in radiation and killed five atomic scientists. Putin said the accident occurred during “work on promising weapons systems,” while Trump tweeted that Russia was testing a nuclear-powered cruise missile unveiled by the Russian leader last year.

To contact the reporters on this story: Ilya Arkhipov in Moscow at iarkhipov@bloomberg.net;Stepan Kravchenko in Moscow at skravchenko@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Gregory L. White at gwhite64@bloomberg.net, Tony Halpin, Karl Maier

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