Russia rejects U.S. missile proposals

A019186412.jpgMOSCOW (Reuters) – The Kremlin on Wednesday rejected U.S. proposals aimed at easing concerns over a missile defense system in Europe and said it would try again to resolve the row once Barack Obama is in the White House.

Russia says the planned U.S. system will threaten its national security and that the administration of George W. Bush, which leaves office in January, has failed to allay its concerns.

“Russia is ready to cooperate with the United States on European security but considers the proposals that were sent are insufficient,” Itar-Tass news agency quoted an unidentified Kremlin source as saying.

“We will not give our agreement to these proposals and we will speak to the new administration,” said the source, who was quoted by Russia’s three main news agencies, an indication the remarks reflect official policy. The Kremlin press office declined to comment.

The Bush administration “is intent on putting the new U.S. president in a hopeless situation, so that he should take responsibility for what they concocted without him,” Tass quoted the source as saying.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said last week he planned to deploy missile systems near Poland’s border in retaliation for U.S. plans to install elements of the proposed missile defense system in Poland and the Czech Republic.

Washington says the shield is needed to protect the United States against missile strikes from what it calls rogue states, specifically Iran.

President-elect Obama has said he would make sure the system had been proven to work before deploying it — a more cautious approach than the Bush administration, which has been pressing to have the system operational as soon as possible.

The U.S. had previously proposed confidence-building measures that included allowing Russian representatives access to sites where the missile system is to be deployed and providing real-time video monitoring of activities at the sites.

Senior U.S. officials said this week they were planning to discuss the proposals with their Russian counterparts soon.

The rejection of Washington’s proposals came on the same day that William Burns, the third-ranking official in the U.S. State Department, was in Moscow for talks with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, Kremlin foreign policy advisor Sergei Prikhodko and Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin.

Burns, the most senior U.S. official to visit Russia since its August war with U.S. ally Georgia, “stressed the importance of efforts by the United States and Russia to work constructively on issues of common interest as the United States prepares for the transition to a new president,” the U.S. embassy said in a statement.

It said he raised issues including Iran, North Korea, a meeting of G20 leaders in Washington this weekend, the war in Georgia and the next round of U.S.-Russian talks on strategic security and missile defense in December.

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