Sunday, November 16, 2008

Russia reaches out to Obama

This is from aljazeera.
It remains to be seen whether anything will come of this. Obama quite rightly is rather doubtful about whether the missile defence system will even work. I am not sure he is that worried about Russian reaction. However, at least there is a certain window of opportunity for a less combative policy on the issue. It seems to me that Russia had already offered the joint defence program to Bush and it was rejected. It will be interesting to see if Obama is any more positive.


Russia reaches out to Obama
Moscow hopes the Obama administration will be less enthusiastic about the US missile defence shield [EPA]
The election of Barack Obama as US president could see Russia and the US reach a deal on Washington's controversial plan to deploy a missile defence system in eastern Europe, the Russian president has said.
Speaking in Washington on Saturday, Dmitry Medvedev said he hoped Obama would seek to repair relations between the two countries that have become seriously strained over the system and the war in Georgia.
"US-Russian relations lack the needed mutual trust. We pin such hopes on the arrival of the new US administration," Medvedev said during his visit for the G20 economic summit.
Diplomatic relations between the two countries plunged to a post-Cold War low after Russia took military action in August to crush neighbouring Georgia's attempt to regain contol over South Ossetia.The region - which broke away from Tbilisi's control in the 1990s - has been recognised as an independent state by Moscow, but much of the West has criticised Russia for its support of the separatists.
'Gesture of goodwill'
In what has been interpreted as a gesture of goodwill, Medvedev signalled his country would be willing to compromise over American plans to deploy a radar system in the Czech Republic and an anti-missile barrage in Poland.
Medvedev also indicated Russia would hold off on a possible military response to the US project. He said Moscow would not be the first to escalate the situation.
"We will not do anything until America takes the first step," he said.
Russia views the project as a threat to its own security.
"It's better to have a global missile defence rather than kind of fractured national elements"
Dmitry Medvedev, Russian presidentJust one day after Obama's election victory, Medvedev announced plans to deploy missiles in Kaliningrad, a Russian enclave which borders Nato military alliance members Poland and Lithuania.
However, the Kremlin hopes the Obama administration will not pursue the missile defence shield project with the same vigour as George Bush, the outgoing US president.
"[The] first signal we received shows that our partners think about this programme rather than plan to simply rubber-stamp it," Medvedev said.
Joint defence plan?
For the first time, Moscow signalled it might accept something less than a total rejection of the missile defence system project by the US. The Russian president suggested it might be possible to agree a joint anti-missile system.
"It's better to have a global missile defence rather than kind of fractured national elements," Medvedev said.
"We have a chance to solve the problem through either agreeing on a global system or, as a minimum, to find a solution on the exisiting programmes which would suit the Russian Federation."
In a marked shift in rhetoric, Medvedev insisted there was "no anti-Americanism in Russia". Instead, there were "problems which have been piling up and chances to solve them".
The Russian president also dismissed suggestions that he made anti-US comments on the day after Obama's election win in a bid to put pressure on the president-elect.
"You think it was blackmail,"he said. "With all respect to the USA, I did not even think then what day it was."
Medvedev said he would meet Obama soon after he takes office in January.

No comments:

US will bank Tik Tok unless it sells off its US operations

  US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said during a CNBC interview that the Trump administration has decided that the Chinese internet app ...