Sponsored Links

Russia hopes Obama visit restores trust: Kremlin

Fri Jul 3, 2009 2:49pm EDT
 
[-] Text [+]

By Oleg Shchedrov

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia hopes next week's visit by U.S. President Barack Obama will help restore confidence between the two biggest nuclear powers, a Kremlin aide said on Friday, after strains over Georgia and a U.S. missile shield plan.

Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev have agreed to "reset" ties damaged under previous administrations. They have made joint work on a new nuclear arms cuts pact and cooperation on Afghanistan their starting points.

The two issues will top the agenda when Obama meets Medvedev for talks on Monday at the start of his July 6-8 visit to Moscow, chief Kremlin foreign policy adviser Sergei Prikhodko told a news briefing.

Prikhodko said rebuilding mutual trust was paramount. Recent disputes over U.S. anti-missile plans, NATO expansion in the former Soviet Union and Russia's 2008 war with U.S. ally Georgia have soured the mood between the two former Cold War foes.

Russia strongly opposes U.S. plans to station anti-missile batteries and radar detection systems in the Czech Republic and Poland to spot and shoot down hostile enemy rockets.

"Without mutual trust in bilateral relations, we cannot deal with START or U.S. anti-missile system plans," Prikhodko said.

Apart from a memorandum on a replacement treaty for the 1991 START-1 pact expiring in December and a deal on the transit of U.S. military supplies to Afghanistan, Medvedev and Obama will sign several documents on sensitive areas of their relations.

Two main ones are an agreement to restore ties between the military, severed after the Georgia war, and a statement on cooperation in the civilian nuclear sector.

Last August Washington shelved an agreement giving Russia access to the lucrative U.S. nuclear energy market as part of its punitive action against Moscow for striking ex-Soviet Georgia and recognizing two of its rebel regions as states.

Obama has told Medvedev that Washington's criticism of Russia's action, launched to stop Georgia from retaking the breakaway province of South Ossetia, remained.

However the progress on new agreements with Russia suggests that Washington is prepared to move on.

Prikhodko said the two leaders could announce the recreation of a high-level government commission, created to handle trade ties and suspended by the George W. Bush administration. Medvedev and Obama will also meet U.S. and Russian businessmen.

ROOM FOR COMPROMISE

Negotiations between the two sides on reductions in their nuclear arsenal are still going on amid complications.

Russia wants cuts, possibly to 1,500 warheads for each side, to be linked to limits on national anti-missile systems and a ban on deploying non-nuclear warheads on strategic missiles, which Moscow views as destabilizing factors.  Continued...

 
Photo

More News

FACTBOX-Five risks to watch east of the EU
Wednesday, 12 Aug 2009 07:13am EDT 
Russia sees U.S. space threat, builds new rocket
Tuesday, 11 Aug 2009 06:27am EDT 
CEOs use Obama visit to press Russia on rule of law
Friday, 3 Jul 2009 01:08pm EDT 
No Russia-U.S. arms deal yet: sources
Friday, 3 Jul 2009 09:08am EDT 
Obama not fully informed on Russia: Putin spokesman
Friday, 3 Jul 2009 06:11am EDT 

Editor's Choice

A selection of our best photos from the past 24 hours.  Slideshow 

Most Popular on Reuters

  • Articles
  • Video