U.S. Missile Plan Worries Russians

Re: US missile defence test 'a success'

I guess the Russians dismissed the musings of one of their top KGB professors who claimed the US was on the brink of collapse a couple weeks ago.

-VG
 
Re: US missile defence test 'a success'

<font size="5"><center>
Russia scraps plan to deploy nuclear-
capable missiles in Kaliningrad</font size>
<font size="4">

Move comes after Barack Obama administration says it will
review Pentagon's proposed defence shield in central Europe</font size></center>


The Guardian
guardian.co.uk
Luke Harding in Moscow
Wednesday 28 January 2009

Russia today announced it was abandoning plans to deploy nuclear-capable Iskander missiles in its European Kaliningrad outpost – a sign that Moscow wants improved relations with the new US administration.

Defence officials said the Kremlin's proposals to station short-range missiles in the small Baltic territory next to Poland had been "suspended".

The move followed Barack Obama's decision to review the Pentagon's controversial missile defence shield in central Europe.

The Kremlin has been incensed by the Bush administration's plans to site missile interceptors and radar bases in Poland and the Czech Republic.

Moscow believes the plan upsets Europe's strategic nuclear balance and targets Russia, but the Bush administration insisted it was intended to defend against a threat from Iran.

Obama has not yet decided whether to press ahead with the scheme or to abandon it, although indications suggest he is sceptical about its value.

Today's Russian move can be interpreted as a Kremlin olive branch to the new US team and a tactic to put pressure on Obama to scrap the shield.

"These plans have been suspended because the new US administration is not pushing ahead with the plans to deploy the US missile defence system in Poland and the Czech Republic," an official told the Russian state news agency, Interfax.

"Russia does not need to deploy Iskanders in the Kaliningrad region if the US does not install its missile defence facilities in eastern Europe."

In November, the Russian president, Dmitry Medvedev, said Russia would station Iskanders in Kaliningrad – the former German city of Königsberg, which was seized by the Soviet Union after the second world war.

He warned that they would be directly pointed at the US nearby defence and radar bases in Poland and the Czech Republic, and said Russia would use radio-jamming equipment to wreck the Pentagon's new missile defence system.

Today's apparently conciliatory move appears to have been timed to coincide with a major speech by Vladimir Putin at Davos, Switzerland, later today.

The Russian prime minister is attending the world economic summit instead of Medvedev – a clear sign that he remains in charge.

He is expected to put forward his ideas for a change in the world economic order and deliver his assessment of what caused the global economic crisis.

He is also likely to put the boot into Ukraine, blaming the chaotic government in Kiev for this month's gas crisis, which left much of Europe without Russian gas.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jan/28/russia-missiles-kaliningrad-obama


<font size="5"><center>Obama administration takes softer stance
on missile defense</font size>
<font size="4">

Is Obama willing to reconsider decision to deploy
ballistic missile defense system - - if Russia helps
curb Iran's pust to develop nuclear weapons ???</font size></center>
McClatchy Newspapers
By Byron Asher
Saturday, February 14, 2009


PRAGUE — The Obama administration has begun to indicate that it's willing to reconsider the Bush administration's push to deploy a ballistic missile defense system in the Czech Republic and Poland — if Russia helps curb Iran's push to develop nuclear weapons.

Echoing Vice President Joe Biden, who said the new administration wants to push a "reset button" on U.S.-Russia relations, Undersecretary of State William Burns told the Interfax news agency in Moscow last week that, "The United States is quite open to the possibility of new forms of cooperation" with Moscow on missile defense, Iran and "the whole range of security issues with Russia." His remarks are posted on the Interfax Web site.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is to meet her Russian counterpart, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, in Geneva, Switzerland next month, paving the way for the first meeting between President Obama and Russian Pres. Dmitry Medvedev at the Group of Eight economic summit in London in early April.

The meetings come as concerns continue to mount about Iran's ballistic missile and nuclear enrichment programs, as Israeli hard-liners who consider Iran an existential threat gain ground and as Moscow grows more vocal about what it charges are U.S. encroachments on its spheres of influence in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. They also come, however, as falling oil prices and bad investments hammer the once high-flying Russian economy.

Treaties to approve the missile defense plans, which Russia opposes, were signed in 2008 in Prague and in Poland. Poland would be home to a missile interceptor base, and the Czech radar installation would be built about 50 miles from Prague.

Echoing doubts about the system, however, Biden and Clinton both said that technological and economic factors also might affect construction of the bases. Said Biden: "We will continue to develop missile defenses to counter a growing Iranian capability, provided the technology is proven to work and cost-effective."

While it's a secondary issue for the U.S., missile defense is one of the most important political issues for the Czech Republic, which two decades ago helped lead Eastern Europe's march from communism to democracy.

Cancelling the project just as Moscow has taken a more aggressive stance toward the former Soviet republics of Georgia and Ukraine would strain U.S. relations with the two East European countries that risked Moscow's wrath to accept it, and with others that also worry about a revanchist Russia.

"The potential U.S. missile defense European site is not just a dozen of anti-ballistic missiles and a radar," Russian First Deputy Prime Minister Sergey Ivanov said in Munich. "It is a part of the U.S. strategic infrastructure aimed at deterring Russia's nuclear missile potential."

The Bush administration argued that it wanted the radars and the missiles to deter and defend against an Iranian ballistic missile attack on the U.S. or the European Union, not as part of a plan to encircle and neutralize Russia.

Few Czechs, however, have bought that argument. Public opposition to the radar installation has hovered at around two-thirds of the citizenry since polling began in September 2006.

A new poll by the Czech-based Public Opinion Research Centre, released on February 11, found that 65 percent of Czech citizens oppose the base and 72 percent want a referendum on the subject. Moreover, the poll found, 77 percent of Czechs fear that the base could become the target of a military attack, and 67 percent are worried about a potential terrorist attack on it.

The Czech officials who brokered the 2008 deal with the Bush administration were warned that everything might change with the new administration, said Jiri Pehe, a political analyst and the director of New York University in Prague. Yet the Czechs ignored those warnings.

Jan Majicek, a spokesman for the No Bases Initiative, a Prague-based group opposed to the base, said that Czechs don't want to be associated with the aggressive American foreign policy of the last eight years.

Second, Majicek said, Czechs don't want foreign troops on their soil again, given the history of Nazi and Soviet occupation. Finally, he said, "Many people feel cheated" by the plan, which reportedly were in motion before 2006 parliamentary elections, but not announced to the public until afterward.

(Byron Asher, a 2008 graduate of Brown University, is an intern with Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty in Prague. He's the son of McClatchy Washington Bureau investigative editor James Asher.)

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/62190.html
 
Re: US missile defence test 'a success'

<IFRAME SRC="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8260230.stm" WIDTH=780 HEIGHT=1500>
<A HREF="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8260230.stm">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 
Between this and the budget for the F22 being cut Mr. President is at least showing the world that he isn't trying to rule like Bush and company did.
 
Back
Top