Azeri Radar Would Not Replace Czech Anti-Missile Site, U.S. Says
15 June 2007
Azeri Radar Would Not Replace Czech Anti-Missile Site, U.S. Says
NATO allies plan to assess missile defense systems by February 2008
By Vince Crawley
USINFO Staff Writer
Washington -- NATO's 26 nations have agreed to assess by February
2008 the political and military implications of planned missile-
defense systems in Europe, and U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates
said alliance members have voiced no criticism of the U.S. portion of
the plan.
Gates also told reporters June 14 that an Azerbaijan radar site,
proposed by Russian President Vladimir Putin, would complement, not
replace, an anti-missile radar system the United States is
negotiating to build in the Czech Republic. Gates visited Brussels,
Belgium, June 14-15 for a scheduled meeting of NATO defense
ministers, as well as a meeting of the NATO-Russia Council.
"I was very explicit in the meeting [of the NATO-Russia Council] that
we saw the Azeri radar as an additional capability, that we intended
to proceed with the radar, the X-band radar in the Czech Republic,"
Gates said.
The United States is in talks with the Polish and Czech governments
to host 10 missile interceptors in Poland and a radar site in the
Czech Republic to defend Europe and North America against
intercontinental missiles launched from the Middle East. (See related
article.)
Russia has expressed concerns that the missile-defense system could
upset the long-standing nuclear deterrence posture in Europe. But the
United States says the proposed 10 interceptors are too few to be
effective against Russia's numerous warheads.
At the annual Group of Eight Summit in early June, Putin made a
surprise offer of partnership with the U.S. and European missile
defense system, proposing to share data from a Soviet-era air-defense
radar system leased by Russia and located in Azerbaijan. Reaction to
the proposal has been mixed in Azerbaijan, where some worry the radar
site could be seen as too provocative for neighboring Iran. (See
related article.)
"I appreciated Putin's recognition of the potential missile threat
from the Middle East and welcomed his proposal last week to share
radar data from Azerbaijan," Gates told reporters.
Throughout the Brussels meetings, Gates said he did not hear
criticism by allies of U.S. anti-missile plans in Poland and the
Czech Republic.
"There were no criticisms by any of the NATO allies of our missile-
system proposals or of our moving forward," Gates said. "There
obviously is interest in trying to encourage the Russians to
participate with us, to make the system complimentary to NATO short-
range missile defenses."
Gates said NATO and the United States would continue discussing how
to make their missile-defense systems work together in a
complimentary way.
On June 14, NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer released a
statement saying the alliance will study the possibility of "bolting"
NATO and U.S. missile-defense systems together to ensure that all 26
allies are protected effectively from future threats.
De Hoop Scheffer said the allies plan to assess by February 2008 the
effects of U.S. anti-missile plans in Europe and how these plans can
be coordinated with NATO's own anti-missile plans.
"In essence, the alliance will pursue a three-track approach," de
Hoop Scheffer said in the statement. The three tracks include:
continue the ongoing NATO project to develop by 2010 a theater
missile-defense for protecting deployed troops; assess the full
implications of the U.S. system; and continue existing cooperation
with Russia on theater missile defense, as well as consultation on
related issues.
De Hoop Scheffer stressed that missile-defense issues are based on
two key principles: the "indivisibility of security" and that there
cannot be "A or B" NATO members in terms of protection from missile
threats.
A transcript of Gates' remarks to reporters after the Brussels
meeting is available on the Defense Department Web site.
The full text of a NATO statement on the Brussels meeting, as well as
audio and video links to meeting events, is available on the NATO Web
site.
(USINFO is produced by the Bureau of International Information
Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
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