 |
 |
 |
 |
| |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |
 |
 |
| |
Nation & World |
 |
| |
|
 |
| |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |

Classifieds Find a home, car,
rental, job, pet,
merchandise, auction, boat,
plane or RV Place
an Ad
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |

L.A. Times Subscription Services Subscribe, Change of Address,
Vacation Stops, Suspend Delivery, College Discount,
Gift Subscriptions, Mail Subscriptions, FAQ
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |

Print Edition Advertisements See this week's ads
 |
 |
| |
OTHER EDITIONS
Print Edition, Orange County,
Valley, Ventura County,
National, Community Papers |
 |
| |

 |
 |
| |
 |
 |
| |
SHOP 'TIL YOUR LAPTOP DROPS |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |
  |
|
 |
| |
 |
| |
  |
 |
| |
|
 |
|
 |

Russia Offers Plan for European Missile Defense
Strategy: Putin's overtures to NATO come amid a mistrust of the U.S. and opposition within the alliance to Washington's plan to build a shield.
By MAURA REYNOLDS, Times Staff Writer
MOSCOW--Russian President Vladimir V. Putin presented a plan for a European
missile defense program to NATO Secretary-General George Robertson on
Tuesday, warning that chances of a renewed Cold War and a new arms race
are growing.
Putin told the visiting Robertson that despite the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization's rhetoric, the alliance's actions seem to treat
Russia as an enemy. And under those circumstances, Russia must take steps
to defend itself.
Putin first proposed a European missile defense last summer. Most of
Washington's European allies oppose a U.S. plan to build a missile
defense shield, and Russia is eager to exploit this difference of opinion
within NATO. Increasingly, Russia has been emphasizing its warm relations
with Europe and turning a cold shoulder to Washington.
"The expansion of [NATO] toward our borders can't be interpreted in
any other way except [as a response to] a threat coming from Russia,"
Putin said in remarks broadcast on national television. "We are concerned
with other statements by other Western politicians . . . who are trying
to restore the image of Russia as some kind of evil empire that is
threatening--although no one is scared."
The Russian leader's comments came as a new spy scandal in Washington
underscored the continuing strain in relations between Russia and the
United States and at a time when statements from the new Bush
administration have only heightened Moscow's concerns.
"There is a huge and ever-growing gap of mistrust between Russia and
America as far as issues of nuclear technologies are concerned," said
Dmitri V. Trenin, a military analyst with the Carnegie Moscow Center
think tank. "And this mistrust is mutual."
Details of Putin's missile defense proposal were not released, but it
appears designed to identify individual countries that pose a nuclear
threat and then to develop systems to block missiles launched from those
locations.
Col. Gen. Leonid G. Ivashov, head of the Defense Ministry's
international cooperation section, said the plan involves three stages:
threat assessment, conceptual development and technology development.
"These elements will be mobile and will be deployed in the directions
of the greatest risk of missiles to cover the most important objects,"
Ivashov said, according to the Interfax news agency.
Ivan Safranchuk, an arms control expert at the Center for Policy
Studies, a Moscow think tank, said the Russian proposal is more
diplomatic than technological. Russia has antiaircraft systems that can
also be used to target incoming missiles, but those systems would not be
enough to build a comprehensive missile shield, Safranchuk said.
"Apart from that, Russia can offer nothing except a magic wand, if it
has one," he said.
Russia froze relations with NATO in 1999 after the alliance began
bombing Yugoslavia. The Kremlin also expelled two NATO officials from
their Moscow office. Relations have thawed slowly since, and NATO's
office here reopened just this week. Robertson was in town for the
ceremony.
Robertson said he told Putin that the alliance will not split over
missile defense. But the NATO chief also said it is only fair to permit
Russia to consider reciprocal measures.
"I made it clear that the NATO allies accept that the United States
has made its decision to have an effective missile defense," Robertson
said. "But what is important now is that we now have a Russian proposal
to deal with the same kind of perceived threat."
Search the archives of the Los Angeles Times for similar stories about:
Europe - Defense,
Vladimir V Putin,
Russia - Foreign Relations - Europe,
United States - Foreign Relations - Russia,
North Atlantic Treaty Organization,
Missiles,
Arms Control. You will not be charged to look for stories, only to retrieve one.
|