NATO BACKS US MISSILE SHIELD OVER RUSSIAN PROTEST
By Paul Ames
AP
02 Dec 08
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) — NATO foreign ministers on Wednesday affirmed
their support for U.S. plans to install anti-missile defenses in
Europe despite Russia’s strong opposition.
The ministers said the planned U.S. defenses in Poland and the Czech
Republic will make a "substantial contribution" to protecting allies
from the threat of long-range ballistic missiles.
Russia has vehemently opposed the deployment, threatening to respond by
placing short-range missiles in its westernmost region, Kaliningrad,
which borders Poland. The U.S. insists the defenses are aimed at
potential attack from Iran and pose no threat to Russia’s ballistic
arsenal.
All 26 NATO allies signed the statement backing the deployment of
interceptor missiles in Poland and an advanced radar station in the
Czech Republic.
Doubts about allied support for the plan were raised last month when
French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the missile defenses would
"bring nothing to security … it would complicate things, and would
make them move backward."
Sarkozy’s statement at a meeting in France with Russian President
Dmitry Medvedev appeared to contradict his early support for the
missile plans at a NATO summit in April. But in Washington a few
days later, the French leader changed tack again, saying that the
anti-missile shield could "complement" Western defenses against a=2
0 threat from Iran.
The NATO ministers agreed Tuesday to gradually resume contacts with
Moscow, which were frozen after Russian troops poured into Georgia
in August.
However, they were critical of Moscow’s actions and insisted the
resumption of low-level talks would not mean a return to business as
usual for the NATO-Russia Council.
Faced with opposition from Russia, the NATO ministers backed away
from establishing a plan for Ukraine and George to move toward entry
into the Western military alliance for the former-Soviet nations.
However, the ministers offered to step up military and
political cooperation to help them achieve their goal of eventual
membership. Russia’s ambassador to NATO, Dmitry Rogozin, welcomed
NATO’s offer to resume talks, but dismissed the alliance plan to
prepare Ukraine and Georgia for membership as an attempt to return
to Cold-War bloc-building that made "no political sense."
The European Union separately proposed building new economic and
political ties with the former Soviet states of Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine.
Several EU nations have been lobbying for such a program to counter
Russia’s increasingly assertive policy toward its neighbors, and
to develop alternative routes for oil and gas pipelines to reduce
Europe’s energy dependence on Russia.
In a sign of Moscow’s more assertive foreign policy, the Russian Navy
said one of its warships would sail through the Panama Canal for the
first time since World War II.
The destroyer Admiral Chabanenko will arrive Friday in Panama for a
six-day visit following maneuvers with Venezuelan ships, said Navy
spokesman Capt.
Igor Dygalo in Moscow. The exercises with Venezuela were the first
such deployment to the Western Hemisphere since the Cold War.
Associated Press Writers Slobodan Lekic and Robert Wielaard contributed
to this story.