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US seeks full partnership with Russia on missiles
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-07-10 11:16 WASHINGTON: The Obama administration is seeking full partnership with Moscow to bridge ballistic missile-defense differences that have strained US-Russian ties for years, the head of the Pentagon's Missile Defense Agency said on Thursday.
He made the comments as President Barack Obama works with Moscow to cut nuclear weapons and weighs whether to go ahead with Bush-era plans to base 10 interceptor missiles in Poland and an advanced radar station in the Czech Republic -- plans strongly opposed by Moscow. "The (new) approach is to lay out ideas, and not to have a fully developed plan," Army Lieutenant General Patrick O'Reilly told a group of Reuters editors and reporters, referring to missile defense discussions with Russia. "You need to move forward at a prudent pace so that there are collaborative decisions, intermediate decisions made along the way, so that there is true partnership," he said.
O'Reilly said he had not received any orders "to deviate" from expanding US missile defenses into Poland and the Czech Republic, an idea Moscow for years has called a threat to Russian security. The initiative for these sites was put forward by former President George W. Bush as a hedge against Iran. Congress has said construction of the sites may not begin until those countries' parliaments have ratified their pacts on the projects with Washington.
O'Reilly said it would take up to five years for a missile field to be built in Poland and 4-1/2 years for the radar in the Czech Republic. These timelines are important because US intelligence estimates Iran may be able to fire a long-range missile possibly tipped with a chemical, biological or nuclear warhead by 2015 or so. Neither Poland nor the Czech Republic is expected to go ahead with ratification until they get a clear signal from the Obama administration that it is sticking with the Bush-era plan. The administration is studying possible alternatives as part of a broader missile defense review due to be completed in December, O'Reilly said. "At this point, they're still laying out alternatives," he said. "Really, it's pre-decisional." O'Reilly, who was in Moscow in May for missile-defense talks, said Russia was now seeing more eye to eye with the United States on the perceived danger from Iranian and the DPRK's progress in ballistic missile development. "I think there was agreement on the facts, but disagreement on the interpretation of the data or the intent" previously, he said. "And as North Korea (the DPRK) and Iran continue to demonstrate capability, those controversies are being eliminated." In addition, the Obama-Medvedev "endorsement" of missile-defense cooperation could be pivotal, added O'Reilly, who is responsible for developing the anti-missile shield that Bush began to deploy in 2004. Bush had also sought Russian cooperation on the missile shield. Russian-US cooperation may have been hampered in the past by a perception that "we had already figured out exactly what we wanted from them and from us, and that we were going to go over there and convince them that our idea was a good one," O'Reilly said. 'DIFFERENT APPROACH' "We are taking a different approach" now, he added. "The approach is a full partnership, and we discuss the ideas first, and that's where we are today, is laying out all the possible ideas." O'Reilly voiced enthusiasm for the possible joint use of a Russian surveillance radar facility at Gabala, Azerbaijan, that Vladimir Putin, then Russia's president and now prime minister, had offered to the United States two years ago. "They have significant capability there" to monitor any missile flights in Southwest Asia, he said, calling it "an absolutely great location" that would marry well with the more precise tracking radar system tentatively planned for the Czech Republic. "Working together, it would be a very effective system," he said. Asked about prospects for such a deal with Russia, O'Reilly said: "I will tell you from just their questions, they are asking very in-depth questions. It indicates very good faith and earnest discussions on what are the possibilities." Richard Burt, chief US negotiator in the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks with the former Soviet Union, said he detected a keen interest in the Obama administration, including in the Pentagon, "to work out some kind of cooperative, technical solution to this missile defense problem." |