ACCESSION NUMBER:00000 FILE ID:96032601.POL DATE:03/26/96 TITLE:26-03-96 PERRY SAYS U.S. ANXIOUS TO MOVE AHEAD WITH START PROCESS TEXT: (U.S., former USSR "ahead of schedule" on disarmament) (760) By Jacquelyn S. Porth USIA Security Affairs Writer Washington -- Defense Secretary Perry says the United States and Russia are "ahead of schedule" in the nuclear weapons disarmament process established under the first Strategic Arms Reductions Treaty (START I) and Washington is "very anxious to get on with START II". The START I process, which will reduce the level of strategic nuclear weapons from 10,000 to 6,000 per country, is being implemented in advance of established time lines, Perry said. He told the American Business Conference in Washington March 26 that the former Soviet states of Belarus, Ukraine, and Kazakstan also are "ahead of schedule" in the START process and are on their way to becoming "non-nuclear nations." The START II agreement, which would further reduce nuclear weapons to the 3,500 range, already has been negotiated, signed and ratified by the United States and now awaits action by the Russian parliament. Perry said it is unclear whether the parliament will ratify the second START accord before the Russian presidential elections to be held in June. Still, he said, "we are very anxious to get on with START II." Both Russia and the United States are already thinking about START III, the secretary said, although he cautioned that that process should not begin until there is agreement on START II. Perry also suggested that the next round of the process could conceivably bring in other nations besides the United States and Russia. In a question-and-answer session with members of the American Business Conference, the secretary noted that the "number one priority" for the United States is to prevent the "fragile" new democracies of eastern and central Europe from reverting back to militaristic societies. "If the democracies in any of those countries lapse, there is a danger of reversion to a militaristic, authoritarian regime that could be hostile to the West," he explained. Perry said the U.S. Defense Department can provide "useful support" to the forces that are seeking "to sustain democracy" in the region. Asked to speculate on the status of the latest round of Chinese-Taiwanese tensions, Perry said that "this particular crisis is behind us now." He noted that the Chinese military exercises, which he described as counter-productive, "have ended" and their troops are returning to barracks. While the Chinese-Taiwanese situation veered "off-track" some six to eight months ago, the secretary said, he expects it to get back on track with the two sides beginning to deal with each other again "in a friendly way" through increasing trade and cultural and business exchanges. Perry told a questioner on terrorism that that "important destabilizing factor" is not related to Islamic fundamentalism but to "Islamic extremism." The problem is not the religion, he stressed, noting that the United States has "strong relations" with a number of Islamic countries around the world, but, rather, members of the religion who are willing to use force and terrorist tactics to try to promote their views and philosophic cause. He cited as examples recent terrorist incidents in Israel and the bombing some years ago of a Pan American flight. The secretary also expressed his concern regarding stability in North Korea. That country is experiencing "enormous economic difficulties," he noted, which could produce political and military unrest. North Korea has expressed hostility over time toward South Korea and the West, Perry said, making it a country "we must be very much concerned with." The secretary told his audience the United States is pursuing a three-pronged strategy against the threat of weapons of mass destruction: prevention, deterrence, and developing robust ballistic missile defenses. The National Missile Defense (NMD) system the U.S. envisions for the future, however, he said, would defend against a limited threat of only several dozen ballistic missiles and not the several thousand envisioned by the Reagan administration's Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI). On other subjects, Perry noted that the United States wants to "reinforce democratic moves" which have occurred in Latin American countries "by forming strong relations with the ministries of defense" there. On the status of the U.S. defense budget in recent years, the secretary noted that military manpower has been reduced by 33 percent and infrastructure by 25 percent. Military bases have been greatly reduced in the past six to seven years, he said, with 50 bases authorized for closure in the last round of decision-making. NNNN .