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Bush's Russian stopover to keep Putin sweet on NATO,
Iraq
November 21, 2002
AFP
US President George W. Bush will seek to reassure his "good friend"
and Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin on NATO expansion during a brief courtesy
visit to Saint Petersburg Friday, though many areas of friction remain in
Russia-US relations.
The visit, which will last barely a few hours, will be the leaders' first
meeting since they signed a key strategic arms reduction treaty during a
three-day Moscow/Saint Petersburg summit last May, seen then as heralding a new
era in relations between the two countries.
Hastily organised to replace a meeting in Mexico that was cancelled when
Putin stayed in Moscow to deal with last month's hostage crisis, the encounter
will follow a NATO summit in Prague that is likely to see the Atlantic Alliance
expand as far as Russia's borders in eastern Europe.
Moscow has vigourously opposed the enlargement taking in the Baltic states of
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, which for 50 years formed part of the Soviet
Union, though analysts believe the Kremlin is now more relaxed on the issue,
regarding it as having little bearing on its relations with Europe and the
United States. Bush was at pains Monday to describe Putin as his "good
friend," frequently referring to him as "Vladimir" in an
interview with eastern European journalists.
"I am going to Russia to make clear to the Russians and Vladimir Putin
that they have nothing to fear from NATO expansion," he said. "I did
not hesitate when Vladimir and I talked about (it), it is very important for me
to go there."
NATO strategies "need to be changed to recognise the new reality, (that)
Russia is a friend, not an enemy," he said.
Bush also strongly backed Putin's handling of last month's hostage crisis in
which 128 hostage and 41 Chechen rebels died after the rebels seized a Moscow
theatre, but the conflict in Chechnya is one of several issues on which Moscow
and Washington have marked differences of view and are likely to figure on
Friday's agenda.
Although Washington has recently muted its criticisms of the reported
widespread human rights abuses carried out by Russian troops in Chechnya, Bush
stressed he would "talk to Vladimir about the need to protect and recognise
the rights of minorities... and at the same time deal with terrorism, and I am
trying to find that balance, I think he can."
The two presidents will also discuss Iraq, until recently the subject of a
bitter debate by their diplomats in the UN Security Council where a compromise
resolution was agreed on November 8, under US pressure, ordering Baghdad to
renounce weapons of mass destruction or face "serious consequences."
Russia, which has traditionally regarded Baghdad as an ally in the Middle
East and has extensive economic interests in Iraq, is apprehensive at declared
US ambitions to achieve "regime change" there, perhaps securing
strategic control over the country's vast oil reserves.
Bush stressed Monday that "the issue is disarmament... we expect
(President Saddam Hussein) to cooperate in disarmament for the sake of
peace," but Russia remains suspicious and fiercely critical of US
statements and initiatives on Iraq which it believes could increase the
possibility of an armed intervention.
Analysts believe that until now, in his relations with Washington, the
Russian leader has played a weak hand well, usually having to give way on
strategic issues such as the US decision to abrogate a key anti-missile treaty
in order to create a missile defence shield, a move Putin described as a
"mistake."
His rapid pro-Western alignment following the September 11 attacks on US
cities has brought him credit and leverage in many Western capitals, together
with what human rights groups regard as excessive indulgence towards his
uncompromising stance on Chechnya.
Russia's geo-political and economic interests, notably its ties with Iraq,
Iran and North Korea -- the Bush-designated "axis of evil" -- and its
immense oil and gas reserves, continue to provide rich potential for Russia-US
conflict.
However Bush's Saint Petersburg stopover is a token of the importance
Washington accords to keeping Russia onside in its war on terrorism even if the
talks themselves are too brief to deal seriously with outstanding issues.
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