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From: Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
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Sent: Wednesday, December 13, 2000 12:23 AM
Subject: US and Russia Military Exchanges


BBC News
Tuesday, 12 December, 2000, 20:30 GMT
US and Russia renew military exchanges

US and Russian military chiefs have agreed to revive exchanges between their
respective armed forces, after a period of strain caused by the Kosovo
conflict last year.

The agreement was signed during talks in Moscow between chairman of the US
Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Henry Shelton, and his Russian counterpart,
General Anatoli Kvashnin.The talks had been expected to cover a number of
prickly issues, such as US plans to deploy an anti-missile shield and
Russian plans to revive arms sales to Iran.

But both sides afterwards played down suggestions of friction, refusing even
to admit the issues had been discussed.

Fears of destabilisation
General Shelton acknowledged that Washington was concerned about Moscow's
announcement last month it would resume conventional arms sales to Iran
"because we see that it could destabilise the region".

"But we hope that this will be sorted out at political levels," he told
reporters.General Kvashnin said: "I don't think there will be any problems
and we'll work in accordance with international agreements."

The BBC's defence correspondent, Jonathan Marcus, says General Shelton was
also expected to try to clarify the contradictory signals coming from Moscow
on Washington's plans to develop anti-missile defences.

The Republican presidential candidate George W Bush has strongly signalled
his desire to press ahead with a missile defence system as quickly as
possible.
This approach would inevitably require the US to break the anti-ballistic
missile - or ABM - treaty limiting such systems.

Even the Democratic candidate Al Gore is committed to continuing research
for such a programme.

Our correspondent said that General Shelton's trip would provide an
opportunity to test the waters in Moscow, though it was not entirely clear
to Washington who was articulating Russia's current policy.

The military approach tends to be firm adherence to the ABM treaty's
guidelines with no room for compromise. This was the view expounded by the
Russian Defence Minister Igor Sergeyev to his Nato hosts in Brussels last
week. It was publicly restated by General Kvashnin after Tuesday's talks.
However, the Russians have been told by the Americans through a variety of
back-channels that the missile defence will go ahead.

And our correspondent says that both President Vladimir Putin and the head
of Russia's strategic rocket forces General Vladimir Yakovlev have seemingly
signalled some flexibility on the issue, especially if an accompanying deal
can be struck to achieve dramatic reductions in nuclear warhead numbers. But
our correspondent says it is safe to say that the Russians are likely to
wait until a new US administration is in place before laying their cards on
the table.


Bruce K. Gagnon
Coordinator
Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
PO Box 90083
Gainesville, FL. 32607
(352) 337-9274
http://www.space4peace.org
[EMAIL PROTECTED]





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