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Russia slams US blacklist as alliance wobbles
By Clara Ferreira-Marques
MOSCOW, Jan 11 (Reuters) - Russia on Friday slammed a U.S. decision to keep
it on a list of states with a poor track record on the spread of weapons of mass
destruction, as old disputes returned to haunt the allies in the war against
terrorism.
Last week President George W. Bush allowed U.S. technology firms to sell
high-speed computers to countries previously excluded by a Cold War-era ban
designed to limit the spread of nuclear arms.
But Russia remained in the third of four categories, far below countries
deemed "reliable" by the United States, the Foreign Ministry said.
"This draws attention to the preservation of the Cold War-era system of
open discrimination, dividing countries which import U.S. computer technology
into different risk groups," the ministry said in a sharply-worded
statement.
"We would like to hope that, in the light of the new strategic
relationship announced by the president of the United States and the president
of the Russian Federation, the American administration will reconsider this
discriminatory decision."
Washington slapped a ban on high-speed computer exports in 1979, in a bid to
restrict advanced computing power that could allow countries such as Libya and
Cuba to develop missile systems and other weapons of mass destruction.
Exports to Canada, Mexico and all of Western Europe do not face such
restrictions.
Russia's sharp reaction came amid signs that the honeymoon period in the
Russian-U.S. alliance forged following the September 11 airline attacks, was
under strain.
Russian President Vladimir Putin was the first foreign leader to telephone
President Bush to offer his support after the hijacked airliner strikes on New
York and Washington.
Initially, the support won Putin a second hearing on his two-year crackdown
on rebels in Russia's secessionist Chechnya province. But as the U.S.-led
campaign in Afghanistan winds down the issue has resurfaced, along with fears
over media freedoms and disagreements over arms control.
WAR OF WORDS
On Thursday, the United States accused Russia of using "overwhelming
force" in its battle to crush Chechen rebels.
"The latest information on Russian operations in Chechnya indicates a
continuation of human rights violations and the use of force against civilian
targets," State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said.
Senior Kremlin aide Sergei Yastrzhembsky refused to comment on the statement,
and some experts said Moscow could now come under renewed pressure from the
West.
"If there does not appear that there is a serious attempt to provide a
political solution, if it looks like there are still a lot of abuses by Russian
troops, then this is going to be an enormous source of irritation," Robert
Nurick of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace told Reuters.
Relations could be further complicated by a court decision to uphold a
closure order against TV6, the only television network outside Kremlin control.
On Wednesday Washington criticised the "flawed" law on which the
closure order was based, and urged the authorities to defend media freedom.
Washington's plans to store, rather than destroy, warheads removed from
nuclear missiles as part of a post-Cold War disarmament pact, have also left
Russian policymakers uneasy.
"This is not so important militarily as it is politically, because the
Americans tried to weaken Putin's position," said the Institute of Eastern
Studies expert Grigory Bondarevsky.
"This is not a disaster. This will not totally change our relation with
the United States, but it makes cooperation slower, and much more
difficult."
Nurick said despite the success of the military campaign in Afghanistan,
Washington still needed Russia's help if it planned to retain a presence in
Central Asia, an issue that could provoke Russian nationalists hostile to
Putin's pro-West stance.
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