How will countries respond to Russia's missile moratorium abandonment by December 31, 2025?
NATO imposes new sanctions on Russia • 25%
Diplomatic talks initiated • 25%
Military escalations occur • 25%
Other responses • 25%
Official government statements or credible international news agencies
Russia's Sergey Lavrov to Abandon Unilateral Moratorium on Short and Medium-Range Missiles Amid U.S. Deployments
Dec 29, 2024, 06:22 AM
Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov announced that the country will abandon its unilateral moratorium on the deployment of short and medium-range missiles. In an interview with RIA Novosti, Lavrov stated that the moratorium is no longer viable and must be discarded, particularly in light of the United States' actions in deploying similar weapons. He emphasized that Russia is committed to adhering to the limits set by the START treaty while rearming its strategic nuclear forces.
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No Significant Reaction • 25%
Majority Condemn • 25%
Majority Support • 25%
Mixed Reactions • 25%
Germany • 25%
China • 25%
United States • 25%
Other • 25%
No official response • 25%
Condemnation • 25%
Engagement in dialogue • 25%
Other • 25%
Diplomatic negotiations • 25%
Military response • 25%
No significant response • 25%
Sanctions imposed • 25%
No significant action • 25%
Engage in diplomatic talks • 25%
Increase military readiness • 25%
Conduct a nuclear test • 25%
Request NATO intervention • 25%
No significant response • 25%
Increase own military capabilities • 25%
Seek diplomatic resolutions • 25%
Improved relations with China • 25%
Isolation from Western countries • 25%
Increased tensions with NATO • 25%
No significant change • 25%
Condemnation without action • 25%
Economic sanctions • 25%
Other • 25%
Military support to Ukraine • 25%
Agreement reached • 25%
Negotiations ongoing • 25%
No agreement reached • 25%
Other • 25%
Postponed Discussions • 25%
No Agreement • 25%
Agreement Reached • 25%
Escalated Tensions • 25%
Condemnation and sanctions • 25%
Other response • 25%
Military intervention • 25%
Diplomatic negotiations • 25%
Condemnation by the UN • 25%
No official condemnation • 25%
Condemnation by the EU • 25%
Condemnation by NATO • 25%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
New arms control agreements negotiated • 25%
No significant impact • 25%
Existing agreements weakened • 25%
Existing agreements strengthened • 25%
No significant changes • 25%
New military alliances formed • 25%
Existing alliances strengthened • 25%
Existing alliances weakened • 25%