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The Bush administration Thursday dismissed as not credible1 a Russian offer to forego deployment2 of missiles near Poland, if the United States drops its European missile defense3 plan. But U.S. officials said they still want dialogue with Moscow on a looming4 missile threat from Iran. VOA's David Gollust reports from the State Department.![]() |
| President Dmitry Medvedev, 11 Nov 2008 |
But President Medvedev has told the French newspaper Le Figaro in remarks published Thursday Moscow would forego the deployment if the U.S. defense plan is scrapped6. Speaking after a NATO defense ministers meeting in Estonia, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the Medvedev offer is not credible:
"Quite frankly7, I am not sure what the missiles would be for in Kaliningrad," he said. After all, the only real emerging threat on Russia's periphery8 is in Iran, and I do not think the Iskander missile has the range to get there from Kaliningrad. This is an issue apparently9, between ourselves and the Russians. Why they would threaten to point missiles at European nations seems quite puzzling to me," said Gates.
Mr. Medvedev also told Le Figaro he wants a frank and honest relationship with the incoming Barack Obama administration, which he said he hopes will abandon the missile defense plan.
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| U.S. Defense Sec. Robert Gates at a press conference during informal NATO-Ukraine consultations10, Tallinn, 13 Nov 2008 |
Secretary Gates, who reportedly could be asked to stay on in the next administration, said threatening to put missiles in Kaliningrad a day after the U.S. election is hardly the way to make a good start. He called the Medvedev remarks provocative11 and misguided.
The State Department, meanwhile, said the Bush administration still wants talks with Moscow on new U.S. proposals designed to allay12 Russian concerns about the missile defense system.
The revised package, which among other things would give Russian inspectors13 access to missile defense sites in Poland and the Czech Republic, has been dismissed by un-named Russian officials as inadequate14.
But State Department Deputy Spokesman Robert Wood said Thursday efforts are still underway to arrange a Moscow visit by the department's arms control chief, John Rood, to discuss the proposals:
"We believe it's in the best interests of the United States and its European allies. We think it's something Russia needs to take seriously, these future threats from the Middle East. We're very concerned about it and we think missile defense is the right approach. We want to cooperate with Russia, but we need a partner," he said.
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| President-elect Barack Obama (Nov 2008 file photo) |
President-elect Obama has expressed concern about the cost and technical viability16 of Bush administration missile defense efforts. But a senior diplomat17 who spoke15 here said the next administration could decide to pursue the program, and that the Bush administration in any case intends to press its agenda until the January 20th Obama inauguration18.
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