Russia has threatened to deploy missiles to target the US missile shield in Europe if Washington fails to assuage Moscow’s concerns about its plans, a harsh warning that reflected deep cracks in US-Russian ties despite President Barack Obama’s efforts to “reset” relations with the Kremlin.
President Dmitry Medvedev on Wednesday said he still hopes for a deal with the US on missile defence but he strongly accused Washington and its Nato allies of ignoring Russia’s worries. He said Russia will have to take military countermeasures if the US continues to build the shield without legal guarantees that it will not be aimed against Russia.
The US has repeatedly assured Russia that its proposed missile defence system wouldn’t be directed against Russia’s nuclear forces and it did that again on Wednesday.
“I do think it’s worth reiterating that the European missile defence system that we’ve been working very hard on with our allies and with Russia over the last few years is not aimed at Russia,” said Captain John Kirby, a Pentagon spokesperson. “It is … designed to help deter and defeat the ballistic missile threat to Europe and to our allies from Iran.”
White House spokesperson Tommy Vietor said the US would continue to seek Moscow’s cooperation but it must realise “that the missile defence systems planned for deployment in Europe do not and cannot threaten Russia’s strategic deterrent”.
‘Clear legal obligations’
But Medvedev said Moscow will not be satisfied by simple declarations and wants a binding agreement. He said: “When we propose to put in on paper in the form of precise and clear legal obligations, we hear a strong refusal.”
Medvedev warned that Russia will station missiles in its westernmost Kaliningrad region and other areas, if the US continues its plans without offering firm and specific pledges that the shield isn’t directed at its nuclear forces. He didn’t say whether the missiles would carry conventional or nuclear warheads.
In Brussels, Nato Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said he was “very disappointed” with Russia’s threat to deploy missiles near alliance nations, adding that “would be reminiscent of the past and … inconsistent with the strategic relations Nato and Russia have agreed they seek”.
“Cooperation, not confrontation, is the way ahead,” Rasmussen said in a statement.
The US missile defence dispute has long tarnished ties between Moscow and Washington. The Obama administration has repeatedly said the shield is needed to fend off a potential threat from Iran but Russia fears that it could erode the deterrent potential of its nuclear forces.
‘Common ground’
“If our partners tackle the issue of taking our legitimate security interests into account in an honest and responsible way, I’m sure we will be able to come to an agreement,” Medvedev said. “But if they propose that we ‘cooperate’, or, to say it honestly, work against our own interests, we won’t be able to reach common ground.”
Moscow has agreed to consider a proposal Nato made last fall to cooperate on the missile shield but the talks have been deadlocked over how the system should be operated. Russia has insisted that it should be run jointly, which Nato has rejected.
Medvedev also warned that Moscow may opt out of the New START arms control deal with the US and halt other arms control talks, if the US proceeds with the missile shield without meeting Russia’s demand. The Americans had hoped that the START treaty would stimulate progress in further ambitious arms control efforts but such talks have stalled because of tension over the missile plan.
While the New START doesn’t prevent the US from building new missile defence systems, Russia has said it could withdraw from the treaty if it feels threatened by such a system in future.
Medvedev reaffirmed that warning on Wednesday, saying that Russia may opt out of the treaty because of an “inalienable link between strategic offensive and defensive weapons”.
Improving relations
The New START has been a key achievement of Obama’s policy of improving relations with Moscow, which had suffered badly under the George W Bush administration.
“It’s impossible to do a reset using old software, it’s necessary to develop a new one,” Medvedev’s envoy to Nato, Dmitry Rogozin, said at a news conference.
The US plan calls for placing land and sea-based radars and interceptors in European locations, including Romania and Poland, over the next decade and upgrading them over time.
Medvedev said that Russia will carefully watch the development of the US shield and take countermeasures if Washington continues to ignore Russia’s concerns. He warned that Moscow would deploy short-range Iskander missiles in Kaliningrad, a Baltic Sea region bordering Poland and place weapons in other areas in Russia’s west and south to target US missile defence sites. Medvedev said Russia would put a new early warning radar in Kaliningrad.
He said that as part of its response Russia would also equip its intercontinental nuclear missiles with systems that would allow them to penetrate prospective missile defences and would develop ways to knock down the missile shield’s control and information facilities.
Igor Korotchenko, a Moscow-based military expert, was quoted by the state RIA Novosti news agency as saying that the latter would mean targeting missile defence radars and command structures with missiles and bombers. “That will make the entire system useless,” he said.
Similar threats
Medvedev and other Russian leaders have made similar threats in the past, and the latest statement appears to be aimed at the domestic audience ahead of December 4 parliamentary elections.
Medvedev, who is set to step down to allow Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to reclaim the presidency in March’s election, leads the ruling United Russia party list in the parliamentary vote. A stern warning to the US and Nato issued by Medvedev seems to be directed at rallying nationalist votes in the polls.
Rogozin, Russia’s Nato envoy, said the Kremlin won’t follow the example of Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev and take unwritten promises from the West.
“The current political leadership can’t act like Gorbachev and it wants written obligations secured by ratification documents,” Rogozin said.
Medvedev’s statement was intended to encourage the US and Nato to take Russia seriously at the missile defence talks, Rogozin said. He added that the Russian negotiators were annoyed by the US “openly lying” about its missile defence plans.
“We won’t allow them to treat us like fools,” he said. “Nuclear deterrent forces aren’t a joke.” — Sapa-AP