Russia’s missile deployment suspension positive step: NATO

By Xinhua,

Brussels : NATO has said that a Russian decision, if confirmed, to halt plans to deploy missiles in Kaliningrad would be a positive step.


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“If the decision has been taken … that would be a positive step,” NATO spokesman James Appathurai told reporters.

He said NATO has taken note of a report by a Russian news agency that Moscow has halted plans to deploy Iskander missiles in Kaliningrad, a Russian Baltic enclave that is sandwiched by two NATO countries – Poland and Lithuania.

But the spokesman said NATO has not received confirmation of the Russian decision.

“When this (deployment) was first proposed, we were quite clear that the idea of deploying missiles in Kaliningrad and pointing them at NATO allies was unwelcome and unhelpful,” he said.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev announced plans to deploy missiles in Kaliningrad shortly after Barack Obama was elected US president, apparently to counter a US plan to deploy a strategic missile defence shield in Eastern Europe.

Russia’s Interfax news agency Wednesday quoted a Russian defence ministry official as saying that the plans have been halted in view of the fact that the new US administration is not rushing through plans to deploy a missile defence shield in Poland and the Czech Republic.

The US missile defence shield was proposed by former US President George W. Bush. But the new Obama administration has not made clear whether it will go ahead with the plan, delay it or even scrap it altogether.

The NATO spokesman said Wednesday that he has not seen any change in the US position, nor in the NATO position.

At their summit in Bucharest, Romania, in April 2008, NATO heads of state and government endorsed the US plan as a basis for the alliance’s strategic missile defence initiative and ordered a look into options of integration.

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