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U.S. Will Try To Persuade Moscow To Soften Positions On CFE, Kosovo

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  • U.S. Will Try To Persuade Moscow To Soften Positions On CFE, Kosovo

    U.S. WILL TRY TO PERSUADE MOSCOW TO SOFTEN POSITIONS ON CFE, KOSOVO AND IRAN

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    01.11.2007 15:47 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The United States is prepared to offer concessions
    to Russia over the Conventional Armed Forces in Europe Treaty to
    try to persuade Moscow to soften its positions on Kosovo and Iran,
    diplomats said Monday.

    The concessions are part of a complex package Washington is pursuing
    as it tries to overcome Russian opposition to independence for the
    Serbian province of Kosovo and to gain support for new sanctions
    against Tehran that the Bush administration announced last week.

    With time running out for a deal on Kosovo - the deadline for an
    agreement between Serbia and Kosovo's ethnic Albanians expires on
    Dec. 10 - and with the United States trying to win support for further
    sanctions against Iran, the administration is pressing to bring Russia
    on board.

    Haunting the United States and the Europeans is Russia's threat to
    withdraw from the Conventional Armed Forces in Europe Treaty, which
    has been considered a cornerstone of European security since the end
    of the Cold War. President Vladimir Putin made the threat in response
    to U.S. plans to deploy an antimissile shield in Poland and the Czech
    Republic that Washington says would protect against attacks from Iran.

    The Bush administration suggested to Russia two weeks ago that it
    could cooperate in the missile shield and that a similar Russian system
    in Azerbaijan could be linked to the U.S. project. Putin turned down
    the offer.

    If Moscow refuses to yield on Kosovo, the United States and most
    European Union countries might recognize its independence anyway. That
    move could further destabilize the Balkans, worsen relations with
    Moscow and lead to a Chinese-Russian veto in the United Nations
    Security Council to block new sanctions on Iran, diplomats said.

    Daniel Fried, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for European
    affairs, told NATO ambassadors this month that the Bush administration
    "had put some new ideas on the table" when Defense Secretary Robert
    Gates was in Moscow two weeks ago.

    Fried said the ideas involved breaking "the impasse which has
    blocked ratification of the adapted CFE Treaty" but he would not
    give details. "The Russians had acknowledged that these were quite
    interesting and they said they wanted to work from them. We hope for
    some intensive diplomacy and movement before Dec.

    12th," Fried said, the International Herald Tribune reports.
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