#23 - JRL 2007-202 - JRL Home
Russian-U.S. missile defense talks to be held in Moscow
Oct. 12
MOSCOW, September 26 (RIA Novosti) - The foreign and defense ministers of
Russia and the United States are set to meet on October 12 in Moscow for missile
defense talks, the Russian Foreign Ministry announced Wednesday.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov
will meet with U.S. State Secretary Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary
Robert Gates for discussions focusing on Washington's controversial plans to
deploy missile defense system elements in Central Europe, as well as Russia's
moratorium on the Soviet-era Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) Treaty.
Lavrov announced the planned meeting at the APEC summit of Pacific Rim
nations earlier this month in Sydney.
Moscow vehemently opposes Washington's plans to place a missile interceptor
base in Poland and a radar in the Czech Republic, and considers them a threat to
Russia's national security.
Earlier last week, a team of U.S. military experts visited a radar facility
rented by Russia in Azerbaijan, which Moscow has offered as an alternative to
the planned U.S. missile shield in Central Europe. The specialists held informal
technical consultations with their Russian counterparts.
Konstantin Kosachev, who heads the International Affairs Committee of the
lower house of Russia's parliament, the State Duma, said on Wednesday that the
legislature would make a proposal to U.S. Congress, and the parliaments of the
Czech Republic and Poland, on holding an urgent conference on the U.S. missile
shield plans.
Opposition parties in Poland and the Czech Republic resist the plans, along
with the majority of their countries' populations.
If lawmakers in the three countries back Russia's proposal, such a meeting
could be held in the near future in Moscow, Kosachev said.
He also said parties in the State Duma would raise the issue at international
forums, including at the October session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe, and also at parliamentary assemblies of the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), NATO member states, and in the
European Parliament.
The Russian lawmaker warned that if the U.S. pushes through with its plans,
"this process could lead to irreversible consequences as Russia, pursuing its
national security interests, will resort to retaliatory measures of a symmetric
or asymmetric nature," leading to an arms race.
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