Showing posts with label Poland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poland. Show all posts

Monday, January 26, 2009

Missile Defence Radar: Russia Will Cooperate


Prague - Cooperation with Russia on the U.S. missile defence system is possible, but Moscow should not have the right to veto where NATO security matters are concerned, Alexandr Vondra, Czech deputy prime minister for European affairs, said in a debate on TV Prima today.

The planned anti-missile shield is to include a radar base on Czech soil. The two Czech-U.S. "radar" treaties were signed by the Czech and U.S. ministers under George Bush's administration last year.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on the ARD television on Tuesday she considers it necessary for Russia to take part in the missile defence shield project.

On Wednesday Czech Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg said he would welcome it if Russia joined the U.S. anti-missile shield project in a meaningful way.

Vondra (Civic Democrats, ODS) today said he expects the new U.S. government of Barack Obama to place a bigger emphasis, in connection with the anti-missile shield, on a dialogue not only in NATO but also with the Russian federation.

"Everything I know makes me believe that they will continue their anti-missile defence project," said Vondra, former Czech ambassador to the U.S.

He said, nevertheless, that Obama's team might make "slight corrections" to the project. It may earmark less money than what was originally planned, he added.

Vondra said the U.S. definitely will not give its missile defence project up.

Apart from the radar, to be built in the Brdy military district southwest of Prague and yet to be discussed by the Czech Chamber of Deputies, the Central European part of the shield is to comprise a base with interceptor missiles in Poland.

Moscow has sharply protested against the project which it considers a threat to its own security.

Washington asserts the shield is to be aimed against possible missile attacks from "rogue" countries such as Iran.

According to Vondra, Obama and his administration will now probably seek even more intensive cooperation with Europe, and also a dialogue with Moscow.

"We negotiated about the issue with Russia in the past two years," Vondra said, recalling that the U.S., too, offered ways of missile defence cooperation to Russia.

One of the then debated possibilities was the presence of Russian monitors at the U.S. bases in the Czech Republic and Poland, which, however, both Czechs and Poles rejected.

"The cooperation, however, cannot include a Russian right to veto where decisions on NATO security matters are concerned," Vondra said.

Author: ČTK

Friday, January 09, 2009

Polish President: "EU Presidency Is A Great Opportunity For Czechs"

Prague - The six-month Czech presidency of the European Union that started on January 1 is a great opportunity for the Czech Republic, Polish President Lech Kaczynski said after a meeting with his Czech counterpart Vaclav Klaus today.

Kaczynski at the same time said he believes that the Czech presidency would be successful. Each EU-presiding country becomes a power and it depends on it how to it will use this opportunity, Kaczynski said.

"We envy the Czech Republic this presidency very much," Kaczynski noted.

Poland will preside over the EU in 2011 only. Kaczynski said the situation would be different then since the Lisbon treaty would probably take effect, changing the functioning of the EU.

The Lisbon treaty is to reform the EU institutions. Besides Ireland, which rejected the treaty in a referendum last June, the Czech Republic is the only EU member state that has not yet ratified it.

Klaus and Kaczynski today primarily focused on the Russian-Ukrainian conflict that led to restricted gas supplies from Russia, but both presidents also discussed the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Kaczynski said the EU represented by the Czech Republic should play an active role in the solution to the conflict. Both presidents mentioned that they touched upon several ideas in this respect during their talks, but they did not elaborate.

"I suppose that diplomacy demands certain discretion in such complex matters," Kaczynski said.

The Israeli military operation against the Gaza Strip started on December 27, 2008 in reaction to the activities of the Hamas radical movement. The conflict has so far claimed several hundred civilians victims in Gaza, according to Palestinian sources.

Czech Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg headed the EU mission that visited the region last weekend. Klaus said today the Czech Republic would try to use all contacts that might help reach ceasefire in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict soon and set up a long-term rational settlement in this part of the world.

Author: ČTK

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