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Putin's missile defence proposal intensifies tug-of-war

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  • Putin's missile defence proposal intensifies tug-of-war

    Agence France Presse -- English
    June 8, 2007 Friday 9:57 AM GMT


    Putin's missile defence proposal intensifies tug-of-war

    by Nick Coleman



    Russian President Vladimir Putin's offer to share a radar station in
    Azerbaijan with the United States for missile defence is aimed at
    wresting back the initiative in a strategic tug-of-war, analysts said
    Friday.

    Putin's proposal at the Group of Eight (G8) summit in Germany on
    Thursday reflected a very different view of global security from
    Washington's and one that showed increasing wariness of US
    intentions.

    Russia has insisted that any efforts to build new anti-missile
    systems should be a matter of joint efforts that would protect the
    wider European continent.

    Moscow remains deeply sceptical about the current US plan to place
    interceptor missiles in Poland and elements of a linked radar system
    in the Czech Republic, both NATO members.

    Reflecting this, analyst Ivan Safranchuk, of the Moscow office of the
    World Security Institute, said there was good reason to doubt
    Washington's claims that its plans are aimed only at "rogue states"
    and not at Russia.

    In the short-term Moscow is particularly worried that the radar in
    the Czech Republic would peer deep into Russian territory, he said.

    "Russia wants to be sure that the system will not have a dual purpose
    and will be targeted only against the Middle East. The location in
    Azerbaijan is a guarantee," he said.

    The system proposed by the United States on the other hand "will be
    operational in the Czech Republic and Poland for 30 years.... Even if
    we believe Bush, who can give a promise on 30 years?"

    "It's absolutely silly to say: 'Trust us because we're friends.'"

    Others however were much more sceptical of Putin's plan, saying that
    the vast Soviet-built radar in Azerbaijan would be useless against
    missiles fired from that country's southern neighbour, Iran.

    An analyst at the Moscow office of the US-based Heritage Foundation,
    Yevgeny Volk, said that Putin's initiative was "mainly propogandistic
    and political" and aimed at increasing the so far muted resistance to
    the US proposals found in some west European countries.

    He added that the initiative was unlikely to persuade the United
    States to drop its plans for the Czech Republic and Poland.

    "I can hardly believe America will give its assent. The proposal is
    drafted in such a way that America will reject it," he said.

    Meanwhile independent defence analyst Pavel Felgenhauer pointed to
    numerous problems with the Russian proposal.

    The radar at Gabala in Azerbaijan is not equipped to link up with
    interceptor missiles, being designed to monitor US military activity
    further afield, he said.

    It would also be highly vulnerable to any attack from Iran, being a
    vast stationary structure 16 stories high, and due to its stationary
    position is not even able to see into all corners of Iran, he said.

    "Readings from the radar won't help them. The radar provides
    information that the United States already has," said Felgenhauer.

    The Russian plan contradicts the US "ideology" on missile defence,
    which is to start work on an interception system in order to
    discourage Iran from developing long-range missiles in the first
    place, he said.

    Doubts were also voiced in Brussels on Friday by NATO Secretary
    General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer.

    "It's a bit early to judge if an Azeri radar could do, and could be
    the answer to the threats. I think it's a bit close to the 'rogue
    states' we are discussing," he said at a security conference in
    Brussels.

    In Azerbaijan itself, Putin's plan received an initial welcome on
    Friday, with Baku saying it was ready for talks.

    But Moscow and its former Soviet satellite Azerbaijan have
    increasingly been at odds and cooperation may not be easy.

    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, who succeeded from his father in
    2003, "is much more pro-Western than his father. He's interested in
    cooperation with Turkey and the United States," said Volk.

    "The balance is mainly on (Moscow's) side but it's shifting to
    America. Azerbaijan understands in defending its national security
    interests it can hardly rely on Russia," Volk said, explaining that
    Moscow is closely allied to Armenia, with which Azerbaijan fought a
    brutal war in the 1990s.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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