Medvedev Optimistic on US-Russia Relations Under Obama
November 17, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
After previously announcing his intent to deploy Iskander missiles in the exclave of Kaliningrad, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev took a more hopeful tone, saying he believes negotiations with the incoming administration of President-elect Barack Obama may be able to ease tense Russian-American relations. Read more
Sarkozy: US missile system wouldn’t help security
November 15, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
NICE, France (AP) - France’s President Nicolas Sarkozy says putting a missile defense system in Europe would do nothing to help European security. Read more
Russia Threatens to Pull Out of Arms Treaty Over NATO Expansion
November 15, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
A senior Russian military diplomat is quoted as saying that if NATO grants Membership Action Plans to Georgia and Ukraine, the Russian government will ultimately pull out of the Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) treaty. Read more
Russian leader Medvedev heading to Cuba, Venezuela
November 14, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
MOSCOW - Russian President Dmitry Medvedev plans to travel this month to Cuba and Venezuela, which have increasing military and trade ties with Moscow. Read more
Gates Hits Out at Russian Missile Deployment
November 14, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
After a NATO meeting in Estonia, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates condemned Russian President Dmitry Medvedev over a plan announced last week to deploy missiles to Kaliningrad to counter an American missile defense base being constructed in Poland. Read more
Medvedev: ready to respond if U.S. ends missile plan
November 13, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
PARIS (Reuters) - Russia could cancel its deployment of missiles near the Polish border if U.S. President-elect Barack Obama scraps plans for a missile defense system in central Europe, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said. Read more
Reports: Kremlin rejects US missile defense
November 13, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
MOSCOW - The Kremlin has rejected a second set of U.S. proposals offered to assuage increasingly strident Russian criticism of plans for an American missile-defense system in Poland and the Czech Republic, news agencies reported Wednesday.
The Bush administration says the system would protect Europe against potential future attacks by Iranian long-range missiles. Moscow has angrily dismissed those assertions, saying the system could eliminate Russia’s nuclear deterrent or spy on its military installations.
In a major speech just hours after Barack Obama won the U.S. presidential vote, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev pledged to base short-range Iskander missiles in the Baltic Sea region of Kaliningrad on the border with Poland if the U.S. goes forward with its plans.
The Bush administration later sent Moscow a new set of proposals, including suggestions about allowing Russian observers at the planned U.S. sites in Poland and the Czech Republic, according to John Rood, the U.S. acting undersecretary of state for arms control.
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said over the weekend the latest U.S. proposals were insufficient. On Wednesday, an unidentified Kremlin official told Russian news agencies that Moscow was prepared to work with Washington on questions of European security but accused the Bush administration of trying to limit the incoming Obama administration’s choices on the issue.
The Kremlin did not comment on the report, but Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell did.
“I hope this unnamed Kremlin official does not express his government’s true wishes because we still very much wish to partner with Russia to combat the growing ballistic missile threat emanating from Iran,” he said, noting that Tehran conducted another missile test Wednesday.
“They are clearly determined to develop a weapon capable of reaching Europe, and for that matter Russia, so it continues to be in our mutual interest to work together on this issue,” Morrell said.
Iran’s defense minister announced the country has successfully test-fired a new, more accurate generation of its longest-range surface-to-surface missile. Iranian television showed the missile being fired Wednesday from a launching pad in the desert.
Meanwhile, the head of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency said Wednesday that Russia has not said what part of the new U.S. proposals it objects to.
“We have laid out very common sense approaches here,” Lt. Gen. Henry Obering III said in Washington. “I think it is time that we ask the Russians to justify why they are taking a stance that internationally is so unreasonable.”
Obama’s plans remain unclear regarding the missile defense system, but an Obama aide has said the incoming U.S. president did not commit to the missile defense plans during a recent conversation with Poland’s president.
The U.S. Embassy in Moscow said the U.S. envoy William Burns met with Lavrov and Kremlin aide Sergei Prikhodko on Wednesday to discuss missile defense talks taking place next month. No further details were released.
An American official said separately the U.S. and Russia will begin talks Thursday in Geneva on finding a successor to the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, which expires at the end of next year. The 1991 START treaty significantly cut U.S. and Russian nuclear arsenals.
The official spoke Wednesday on condition of anonymity because she was not authorized to be quoted by name.
_____
Associated Press Writers Slobodan Lekic in Brussels, Bradley S. Klapper in Geneva, Foster Klug and Desmond Butler in Washington, and Lolita Baldor in Tallinn, Estonia, contributed to this report.
AP | Mike Eckel | Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Italy Min: US, Russia, Europe Should Build “New Security Order”
November 12, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
ROME (AFP)–U.S. President-elect Barack Obama should work with Russia and Europe to build a “new world security order” in which a missile shield would have no place, Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said Wednesday. Read more
Obama’s First Appointment: An Ominous Portent
November 9, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
Obama’s first appointments have confirmed the grimmest suspicions about the new regime. Read more
Russia sees hope of missile progress with Obama
November 9, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia hopes for constructive talks with the next U.S. administration on Washington’s planned missile defense system in Europe, Russian media quoted Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov as saying on Sunday. Read more


