Posted by
whoyg1900 on Tuesday, November 10, 2009 8:48:24 PM
BRUSSELS -- The United States and Russia on Saturday signed a new
agreement aimed at reducing the risks of either country firing a
nuclear warhead because of a false missile attack alert.
"The result will be deeper confidence and greater strategic stability
between our two nations which translates into a safer and more secure
world," US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said after signing a
memorandum of understanding with Russian Foreign Minister Ivan Ivanov.
In comments after the signing ceremony, Albright also said the US was
satisfied with Russian cooperation on the Middle East and in
Afghanistan, but that differences remain over arms sales to Iran and
Russian relations with Chechnya and Georgia.
The accord, which expands an earlier agreement, aims to reduce nuclear
danger by establishing a pre-and post-launch notification system for
launches of ballistic missiles and space launch vehicles.
The two countries also agreed to
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tell each other if satellites are forced out of orbit, or if they are
going to conduct space experiments that could affect early warning
radars.
Ivanov, who earlier met NATO foreign ministers here, said the
memorandum was aimed at strengthening strategic stability, and that he
hoped it would eventually lead to a global system for controlling
ballistic missiles.
Albright said the US and Russia would invite other nations to join the new missile and space launch notification system.
"This reflects the fact that proliferation is a threat to every nation
and that contributing to stability is every nation's responsibility,"
she added.
Speaking after their meeting, a US source said there were real patterns
of cooperation between the two countries on the Middle East conflict
and the UN resolution to pressure the Taliban into expelling Osama bin
Laden.
However there are still some issues the US wants addressed, and
Albright urged Moscow to think about how it will present its policies
to the new US administration that starts work in January, the source
said.
Albright re-itereated concern over Russia's decision to pull out of an
accord banning arms sales to Iran, a country that "speaks openly of the
destruction of Israel."
Ivanov replied that there were no plans for contracts with Teheran in the immediate future, the spokesman said.
Albright also complained that Moscow was not cooperating with the
Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) on the
conflict in Chechnya, where the US has accused the Kremlin of using
excessive force.
She also said she was unhappy with the new visa policy for Georgia,
which requires Georgian citizens to have visas to visit Russia, yet
gives exemptions to people from its separatist regions of Abkhazia and
South Ossetia.
The missile memorandum complemented an agreement on sharing early
warning information signed last June by President Bill Clinton and
Russia's President Vladimir Putin.
The new system will be located at
pearl wholesale a Joint Data Exchange Center in Moscow agreed under the Clinton-Putin accord.
It will greatly expand the number and types of launches for which
notice will have to be given to include shorter-range ballistic
missiles, sounding and research rockets and most space launch vehicles.
Early information exchanges began after Clinton and former President Boris Yeltsin signed a joint statement on them in 1998.