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MISSILE DEFENSE
NATO chief says missiles will not target Russia
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) June 15, 2011

NATO leader Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Wednesday that the Western military alliance would not attack Russia, as he sought to soothe Moscow's concerns over NATO's missile defence system.

Rasmussen said Russian rhetoric was unnecessary and stuck in the past, as he insisted that the missile shield project in Europe would go ahead anyway regardless of whether the Kremlin decided to cooperate.

Speaking to a missile defence conference at the Royal United Services Institute military think-tank in London, the NATO secretary general said he could offer Moscow guarantees that the project was not targeted at them.

"Large parts of Russia and many Russian citizens face a missile threat too and NATO is convinced that cooperating with Russia on missile defence is in the interests of all of us," Rasmussen, the former Danish prime minister, said.

"It makes sense politically, practically and militarily.

"What does not make sense is for Russia to talk about spending billions of roubles on a new offensive system to target the West.

"This type of rhetoric is unnecessary. This type of thinking is out of date. This type of investment is a waste of money because we are not a threat to Russia.

"We will not attack Russia. We will not undermine the security of Russia.

"The threat to Russia comes from elsewhere and our invitation to cooperate on missile defence is proof of that.

"We have taken a decision to build an allied system. That is a reality; and that will not change."

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev agreed at a NATO summit in November to explore the possibility of cooperating with the former Cold War foe on a system to protect Europe's population from the threat of ballistic missiles.

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization, which brings together 28 countries in Europe and North America, is thought to view Iran and North Korea as posing a longer-term missile threat to NATO territory.

Fearing that the system would undermine its nuclear deterrent, Moscow has demanded a legally binding guarantee that the missile shield was not aimed at Russia.

"The best guarantee for Russia is to be part of the process and connected to the system," Rasmussen said.

"We could envisage setting up a joint centre where we could look at the ballistic missile threat together, share early warning data, exchange information and share assessments.

"We could also envisage setting up a joint centre where we could coordinate our responses."

The NATO chief was due to hold talks with British Prime Minister David Cameron on the alliance's Libya operation later Wednesday.




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Czechs drop plan to host US missile warning centre: minister
Prague (AFP) June 15, 2011 - Prague is dropping plans to host an early warning centre assessing data for a planned US anti-missile shield in Europe, Czech Defence Minister Alexandr Vondra told reporters Wednesday.

"We have entered a phase wherein this (US offer) is out-of-date," Vondra said after meeting William Lynn, deputy US secretary of defence, in Prague.

"The original offer for the early warning system won't be needed here. We will look for other ways to involve the Czech Republic" in the now NATO-adopted anti-missile project in the future, he added.

Lynn said the offer "overtaken by events... no longer fits either the missile defence framework or the Czech needs."

The centre was seen by Czech politicians as a consolation project after US President Barack Obama had scrapped in September 2009 plans to build a powerful anti-missile radar on Czech soil, promoted by his predecessor George W. Bush.

Surveys showed some 70 percent of Czechs had disapproved of the radar.

The shield plan enraged Russia, which called it a security menace on its doorstep, although Washington insisted the aim was to ward off a potential long-range missile threat from Iran.





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Seoul deploys second Aegis destroyer
Seoul (UPI) Jun 10, 2011
The South Korean navy has officially deployed its second Aegis destroyer, Yulgok Yi I, into service after the successful completion of nine months of sea trials. The 8,500-ton KDX-III destroyer took part in a four-day military exercise near Ulleungdo Island, around 75 miles east of the Korean Peninsula in the Sea of Japan. The Yulgok Yi I - named after one of Korea's most promin ... read more


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