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The mayor of the Deveselu commune, Ion Aliman, died on Thursday morning at the Colentina Hospital, where he was hospitalized for complications after being infected with the Sars-Cov-2 virus. He was 57 years old.
Aliman had been confirmed with the new coronavirus in early September, when he was hospitalized at the Caracal Municipal Hospital. Later, at the request of the family, he was transferred to the Hospital Colentina de la Capital, reports gazetanoua.ro.
From the first information, he had diabetes and underwent a kidney transplant.
Ion Aliman was mayor of the Deveselu commune since 2012, and in the September 27 elections he ran for a third term.
The connection between the Deveselu shield and the nuclear treaty. How Romania became a target
The anti-missile shield installed in our country came to light after the United States announced its withdrawal from the INF treaty, and Russia accused that the Deveselu missiles violated this treaty anyway
The INF treaty, signed in 1987 by then-US President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, banned the use of a full range of missiles with a range of 500 to 5,000 km. Russia claims that Deveselu’s missile shield violates the INF treaty.
Russian officials have repeatedly claimed that American Aegis Ashore systems, such as the one installed in our country, use MK-41 type vertical launch equipment. Such equipment, the Russians claim, could launch not only interceptor missiles, but Tomahawk-type cruise missiles as well, and thus be prohibited by the INF Treaty. This explains the proposal of the Russian Defense Ministry, which on Thursday suggested that the United States destroy the MK-41 missile launchers of the Romanian anti-missile defense device that would violate the Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty.
Which would mean in Moscow’s vision, that the activation of the shield in our country, in 2016, meant the annulment of the Treaty, from which the United States announced its withdrawal on September 1. As early as 2016, Vladimir Putin threatened Romania and Poland that they might be within range of Russian missiles because they agreed to house elements of the anti-missile shield, a statement later repeated by several officials in Moscow.
The Kremlin claims that the Deveselu base could easily be transformed into one designed to launch missile attacks against Russia. Recently, when he introduced the new Russian “super-weapons”, Putin explicitly said that they were developed in response to the US missile shield.