Showing posts with label u.s. russia relations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label u.s. russia relations. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Russia Warns Of A Return To The Cold War

Russian President Medvedev

Medvedev Warns Of Cold War Over Missile Defence -- Sydney Morning Herald

President Dmitry Medvedev Wednesday warned of a new Cold War era if Russia and the West failed to agree on missile defence, in the first major news conference of his presidency.

Despite the startlingly warning to the United States and Europe, Medvedev confounded expectations he would use the event to finally announce if he intends to seek a new Kremlin mandate in 2012 elections.

Russia is increasingly worried about US plans to build missile defence facilities in ex-Communist eastern Europe and is also offended that NATO appears to have shunned its proposals for a joint missile defence shield.

Read more ....

More News On Russian President Medvedev Threatening A New Cold War

Russia threatens nuclear build-up over U.S. missile shield -- CNN
Russian president threatens return to Cold War -- Herald Sun
Medvedev warns of new Cold War over missile defence -- AFP
Medvedev warns of buildup if no missile shield deal -- Reuters
Russia to boost strike nuclear potential if missile cooperation with NATO fails -- RIA Novosti
Medvedev says defense cooperation lacking -- UPI
Russia counters U.S. missile defence -- The Hindu
Russia Threatens Quitting START Over European Missile Defense Shield -- RTT News

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

U.S. And Russian Defense Officials Meet In Washington

MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING - Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, left, and Russian Defense Minister Anatoly Serdykov, right, sign a memorandum of understanding at the Pentagon, Sept. 15, 2010. The document provides a framework for a variety of cooperative, military-to-military programs to be undertaken during the coming year. DoD photo by R. D. Ward

Top US and Russian Defense Officials Renew Military Cooperation -- Voice of America

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates and his Russian counterpart, Anatoly Serdyukov, have vowed to expand military cooperation signaling an improvement in relations between the former Cold War foes.

In the first visit to the Pentagon by a Russian defense minister in five years, Serdyukov was greeted by a military band and color guard before heading into talks here at the Pentagon with Gates and other U.S. officials.

Read more ....

More News On Today's Meeting Between U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates And Russian Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov

U.S. and Russian defense chiefs eye closer ties
-- Reuters
US, Russian defense chiefs promote deeper ties -- AFP
Pentagon opens doors to Kremlin official -- AP
Gates, Serdyukov sign new agreements -- UPI
Russia, U.S. sign memorandum on military cooperation -- RIA Novosti
Russia, U.S. establish defense working group -- RIA Novosti
Gates, Serdyukov Renew U.S.-Russia Military Ties -- U.S. Department of Defense
Russian defense chief visits Pentagon to seek Gates' advice on reform -- Stars And Stripes
Russian Missile Defenses Could Receive U.S. Assistance, Gates Says -- Global Security Newswire
Gates, Russian Counterpart Look to Downsize Militaries -- Newser

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Russian Authorities Are Upset Over U.S./Nato Anti-Drug Efforts In Afghanistan

Power couple: President Medvedev and Vladimir Putin. Photo from The Daily Mail

Russia Orders Troops To Prepare For War With US -- Before It Is News

Reports circulating in the Kremlin today state that Prime Minister Putin has ordered Russian military forces to prepare to confront American military forces in Afghanistan over what Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov warns is the “greatest threat to International peace and security”, Afghanistan’s thriving drug trade supported by the US and NATO.

Not being reported to the American people about the Afghanistan war is that it has nothing to do with their being protected from terrorists, but rather it involves the billions of dollars gained for many of the West’s top intelligence agencies (mainly the CIA) from the heroin produced in this region (90% of World’s total) that by 2001 the Taliban had virtually eliminated.

Read more ....

My Comment: The heroin problem in Russia and other former Soviet states is a disaster. Millions are addicted, with all the social and medical problems associated with it. With much of these drugs coming from Afghanistan .... the Russians have every reason to be upset. But what is aggravating the situation is the perception that while there is some drug eradication programs in place, U.S./Nato/Afghan attempts to stem this trade are minimal at best .... absent at worse.

Will Russia go to war with the U.S. over Afghanistan's export of drugs .... of course not. But this will strain ties as Afghanistan continues to get a pass in the production and exportation of drugs like heroin.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Patriot Deployment In Poland Displeases Russia

A US Army's Patriot Surface-to Air missile system is displayed during the Air Power Day at the US airbase in Osan, south of Seoul on October 12, 2008. Photo from World Military Forum

Russia Displeased By Patriot Deployment In Poland -- Global Security Newswire

Russia today expressed its displeasure with the recent fielding of a U.S. Patriot missile battery in Poland, Reuters reported (see GSN, May 25).

"Such military activity does not help to strengthen our mutual security, to develop relations of trust and predictability in this region," according to a Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman.

Read more
....

More News On Russian Reaction To Patriot Missiles Being Installed In Poland

Russia Says U.S. Missiles In Poland "Don't Help Trust" -- New York Times/Reuters
US Patriot missile unit deploys in Poland, Russia bristles -- AFP
Russia Baffled by U.S. Deployment of Patriot Missiles in Poland -- Bloomberg Businessweek
U.S. deploys missiles in Poland, may dampen relations with Russia -- Xinhuanet
Russia not to deploy missiles due to U.S. missiles deployed in Poland -- Xinhuanet
U.S. Patriot missiles in Poland do not strengthen regional security - Russia -- RIA Novosti
Russia Reacts Strongly to Deployment of US Missiles in Poland -- Novonite
Moscow puzzled by Patriot missiles in Poland -- Voice of Russia

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Russia Is Airing It's Displeasure With The U.S. In Public

Vladimir Putin and Hillary Clinton. Photo: RIA Novosti

Tense Moments at Clinton-Putin Meeting -- ABC News

ABC's Alexander Marquardt reports: When reporters traveling with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Moscow were informed that a last-minute meeting with Russia's Prime Minister Valdimir Putin had been added to the schedule, they were told they would only get to see a few seconds of handshakes before being ushered out.

Instead, with cameras rolling, they watched Putin spend six minutes rattling off a number of complaints he has with the United States.

Read more ....

My Comment: Jennifer Rubin does an excellent summary on what this fiasco all means. The link to her post is here.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

U.S. - Russia Defense Relations -- Is There A Problem?

President Obama met with President Dmitri A. Medvedev of Russia on Wednesday in London (April, 2009). Todd Heisler/The New York Times

U.S. Denies Defense Crisis with Russia -- Defense News

WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama's administration denied a row over the U.S. anti-missile shield was slowing a landmark nuclear treaty with Moscow on Feb. 9, after days of sharp Russian criticism of NATO.

Obama also pointedly contrasted Russia's "forward leaning" approach to confronting Iran's nuclear drive with China's more ambivalent stance, as Washington sought "significant" new sanctions against the Islamic Republic.

Read more ....

Update: US ambassador: arms deal to mention missile shield -- Washington Post/AP

My Comment: They will work it out for the simple reason that they have to.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Russia Responds To U.S. Missile Plans For Poland



Russia Responds To U.S. Missile Plans For Poland -- Yahoo News/Reuters

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russia will strengthen its Baltic fleet in response to U.S. plans to deploy Patriot missiles in Poland, Russian state news agency RIA reported on Thursday, citing an unnamed senior navy official.

"The surface, underwater and aviation elements of the Baltic Fleet will be strengthened," RIA quoted the unidentified Russian navy official as saying.

Read more ....

More News On Russia's Response To US Patriot Deployment In Poland

Russia responds to U.S. missile plans for Poland -- Reuters
U.S. Patriot missiles to be deployed near Russian border: Polish DM -- China View
Russia's Navy to build up Baltic Fleet over Polish missile plans -- RIA Novosti
Poland says basing Patriot missiles nearer Russia not political -- RIA Novosti
US missiles for Poland -- Straits Times
Russia Denies Baltic Fleet Boost Over Patriot Move -- New York Times/Reuters
Russian Defense Ministry denies Baltic Fleet reinforcements -- Baltic Review

Friday, December 4, 2009

US, Russia Pledge Arms Cooperation As Nuclear Treaty Expires



Russia, U.S. Agree To Maintain Expiring Nuclear Arms Pact -- L.A. Times

The Kremlin and the Obama administration say they will continue the provisions of the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty of 1991, which ends today, while they try to negotiate a new deal.

Reporting from Washington - The Obama administration and the Kremlin agreed Friday to continue the provisions of their keystone nuclear arms control treaty after its expiration today while they try to negotiate a follow-on agreement.

The two governments issued a statement saying that, because of their desire for stability, "we express our commitment, as a matter of principle, to continue to work together in the spirit of the START treaty following its expiration." The governments cited a "firm intention" to approve a new treaty at the earliest possible date.

Read more ....

Update: US and Russia Miss Treaty Deadline -- New York Times

My Comment: The spirit is one of cooperation and agreement. A delay of a few weeks and/or more is not going to be significant. Since both sides are in agreement on the main principles and key points, I expect this delay to not last long. A new agreement will probably be reached in the new year, and signed after the U.S. Congress gives its approval .... an approval that will probably be given in the spring/summer of 2010.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Russia's Putin Has No Interest To Talk About Sanctions Against Iran

Premier Wen Jiabao and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin walk outside the Great Hall of the People in Beijing Tuesday after arriving for an official welcoming ceremony.[China Daily/ Xu Jingxing]

Russia's Putin Says 'Too Early' For Iran Sanctions -- AFP

BEIJING — Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said here Wednesday that it was "too early" to discuss sanctions against Iran over its disputed nuclear programme.

"I believe it's too early to speak of them," Putin told reporters at the end of a visit to Beijing, when asked about the possibility of sanctions against Tehran.

"There is no need to scare the Iranians," the prime minister said. "There is a need to reach agreements."

Read more
....

Update #1: Putin: Iran sanctions talk premature -- AP

Update #2: Russia rejects, for now, talk about sanctions against Iran -- McClatchy News

My Comment: What is Secretary of State Clinton doing in Russia?

The Wall Street Journal summed it up best .... Hillary Clinton Gets Nothing Out of the Russians. Even her wish to meet PM Putin is not going to happen, Putin is in China doing business that he perceives is more important to Russia than meeting the U.S. Secretary of State.

Worse, it is today that we also learn that Russia has adopted a nuclear first strike policy against what it perceives could be threats to its sovereignty .... NATO and the U.S. are included in this perception of what could be a threat.

No one in the American media is saying it (unlike the Russian media which is pointing this out) , but she is out of her depth in Moscow.

This trip was incredible ill prepared from the start, and has only help to diminish U.S. relations with Russia. The Russian Press and punditry are all pointing this out, being effectively used by the Russian Government to point out American weakness and its irrelevance in Russian affairs. Heads should roll for this fiasco, but my bet is that nothing is going to happen.

Russian Officials Will Be Permitted To Visit All U.S. Nuclear Missile Sites

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert gates inspects a GBI in its Alaskan silo.
Photo from The Register

Tentative Inspection Program Would Allow Russia to Visit U.S. Nuclear Sites -- FOX News

The plan, which Fox News has learned was agreed to in principle during negotiations, would constitute the most intrusive weapons inspection program the U.S. has ever accepted.

Russia and the United States have tentatively agreed to a weapons inspection program that would allow Russians to visit nuclear sites in America to count missiles and warheads.

The plan, which Fox News has learned was agreed to in principle during negotiations, would constitute the most intrusive weapons inspection program the U.S. has ever accepted.

Read more ....

My Comment: On the day that we learn that Russia reserves the right to launch a nuclear first strike, we also learn that we are now going to bring Russian officials to all of our nuclear sites.

Am I the only one who sees something our of whack here?

Thursday, October 1, 2009

The Missile Shield - Why We Planned It, Why We Scrapped It, And Why It Matters -- A Commentary

Presidnt's Medvedev (Russia) and President Obama

From The Scholar's Page:

The security blogosphere is buzzing with talk of the Obama administration's decision to scrap planned missile defense architecture in Eastern Europe. The majority of commentators have been content to play the role of cheerleader, offering no substantial analysis of the reasoning behind this decision or the diplomatic consequences of its implementation. As I read the debates raging across the internet concerning this decision it quickly became apparent that an outline of the "whys" of this decision is sorely needed. This post is an attempt to provide such a resource.
Read more ....

My Comment:
An excellent summary on the history, impact, and direction of missile defense in Europe. If I have a difference of opinion with this post, it is the assumption that U.S. and Russian relations are going to improve from the decisions that President Obama has now done on missile defense.

I do not see this, and my input comes from reading the Russian press and from what my relatives and friends are saying in Russia. U.S. dismissal of its agreements with Poland and the Czech Republic are now being used by Russia in its political battles with American allies like the Ukraine, Georgia, and to a lesser extent the Baltics. The assertion that they are making (and making it very effectively) is that America cannot be trusted with its agreements, and that they will break them if it is convenient to them.

What is bothersome to me is that there is also now an element of contempt in both the Russian press, and what minor Russian officials are now saying about President Obama and his administration. I know that there is an element of racism in their remarks (Russians are very xenophobic to outsiders, an altitude that only Russians can understand), but this contempt mainly comes from a perception that President Obama is weak and can be easily manipulated.

In reference to Afghanistan, U.S. transport planes are transversing Russian territory not because Russia wants to help the U.S., they are doing it because it is in their strategic interest to do so. If it was not .... they would have said no a long time ago. Missile defense never had an impact on making this decision, the growth of Islamic militancy and its impact on regions like the Caucasus and Central Asia is what concerns them for the simple reason that Russian and Soviet history is filled with examples of war and conflict in suppressing this Islamic militancy.

U.S. - Russia relations will continue because there is a shared interest to pursue them. But on issues like Iran, Venezuela, Cuba, energy supplies to Eastern Europe, Georgia and the Caucasus, Africa from the Sudan to Zimbabwe, Russian influence and desire to help the U.S. will be lacking at best, foot dragging at worse.

Monday, September 21, 2009

The Best Analysis That I Have Read So Far On How Russia Views The Abandonment Of U.S. Missile Defense In Eastern Europe

Kremlin Spin Machine Goes into Overdrive -- The Danger Room

Somewhere in an alternate reality, retired KGB colonel Vladimir Putin sips tea in a St. Petersburg kitchen, wearing a knockoff Adidas tracksuit, sandals and socks. It’s September: Time, perhaps, for a mushroom-picking trip out at the dacha?

But no, we inhabit a different universe. It’s September, which means Prime Minister Putin is entertaining influential foreigners at a lavish mansion outside Moscow. The Valdai discussion forum was back in town.

Read more ....

My Comment: I am a product of both cultures. My parents are Russian, but I was born in Canada growing up in a Russian environment. Nathan Hodge who wrote the above article is not Russian .... but he definitely captures the mind and spirit of how Russians think. Eastern Europeans understand this mindset, but the problem is that President Obama and the White House are thinking like liberal Americans.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

U.S., Russia Unlikely To Cooperate On Missile Defense, Experts Say

Qabala radar station (RFE/RL)

From Global Security Newswire:

WASHINGTON -- A number of political and security concerns make cooperation between the United States and Russia on missile defense unlikely, experts said this week (see GSN, Aug. 21).

"Politically it's going to be very, very difficult" due to distrust by Russian military leaders of their U.S. counterparts and other "bad atmospherics," Mikhail Tsypkin, an associate professor at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School, said Tuesday during a panel discussion at the Hudson Institute.

Read more ....

Update #1: Russia, US may jointly monitor missiles -- WA Today

Update #2: Russia, U.S. undecided on observation site -- UPI

My Comment: If the two sides cannot agree on where the site should be .... how can they agree on the more technical details of this agreement.

My guess is that they cannot.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Russia's Moves Raise Doubts About Obama's 'Reset'

President Barack Obama and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin shake hands during a meeting at the near Moscow Tuesday. Loeb/Getty

From Time Magazine:

The much-trumpeted "reset" of relations between Russia and the U.S. was dealt a slap in the face last week as Moscow went on the offensive against Ukraine and Georgia. After Russian President Dmitri Medvedev waded into Ukrainian politics with barbed criticism of his Ukrainian counterpart's "anti-Russian" policies, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin embarked on a provocative trip to reaffirm support for Abkhazia, the Moscow-backed territory that enjoys de facto independence from Georgi

Read more ....

My Comment: When President Obama commented that PM Putin's mindset is in the Cold War, and when Vice-President Biden commented that the eventual social and economic collapse of Russia would make Russia acquiesce to U.S. demands .... that is when I knew that we were in trouble. Russia has no interest to "reset" a relationship that is not in its favor .... and especially with the U.S..

Russian Subs And US Safety

Reports of Russian submarine activity have raised concerns within the Pentagon.
(File photo) (AFP: NTV)


From Moscow News:

Having spent much of my life studying and dealing with the Kremlin, I am keenly aware of how frustrating some people in it can be. They are suspicious of anything the United States does (occasionally with good reason); they see conspiracies where none exist; and they sometimes act like bullies - as we saw last August in Russia's overreaction to provocations by Georgian President Saakashvili.

That said, I am also aware that some Americans can be just as paranoid and hostile to Russia, and on principle. These people often overreact to what Russians do - which is exactly what happened after the recent reports of Russian Akula submarines off the US east coast.

Read more ....

My Comment: A "back to planet earth" analysis.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Russia Sees U.S. Space Threat, Builds New Rocket

From Reuters:

MOSCOW (Reuters) - The United States will be able to hit any target in Russia from space by 2030, the commander of Russia's air force said on Tuesday, announcing that Moscow will develop a new air defense system to avert the threat.

"The development of air and space offensive weapons by foreign states demonstrates that by 2030 radical changes will take place in the exploration of air and space as an integral sphere of armed struggle," Russian news agencies quoted three-star General Alexander Zelin as saying.

Read more ....

My Comment: The problem that the Russians have in responding to any U.S. initiative in space is that they do not have the resources or means to counteract it.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Biden Had It Right: Rural Russia Is Dying Of Poverty, Neglect

Vice President Joe Biden caused a dust-up in relations with Moscow the other day when he suggested that Russia had no choice but to accommodate to U.S. demands because its economy is "withering." Photo from The L.A. Times

From McClatchy News:

KUVSHINOVO, Russia — The government administrator was bursting with optimism: More children are being born, many rubles will be invested in infrastructure and his region is weathering the global economic storm.

"The situation is so good," said Boris Zaitsev, a broad-shouldered man who spoke in a confident monotone.

Outside his office, some 170 miles northwest of Moscow, the front steps to the Soviet-era government building are falling into a pile of rubble. Deep, spine-rattling potholes that rival sections of Baghdad riddle the town's streets. The region's population has plummeted by more than a quarter.

Read more ....

My Comment: I last visited the steppes of Russia in 2007, and I enjoyed the desolation and abandonment.

But that is just me.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Russia Relations Toughest Since the Cold War, Commander Says

Gen. Bantz J. Craddock. (Photo from The New York Times)

From The Danger Room:

Days after Russian President Dmitry Medvedev announced his country's intentions to revamp its armed forces, the top U.S. commander in Europe is warning of a new period of "uncertainty" in U.S.-Russian relations.

In Senate testimony today, Gen. Bantz Craddock, the head of U.S. European Command, was blunt. "The relationship with Russia," he said, "is likely to be more difficult to manage in coming years than any time since the end of the Cold War."

Read more ....

My Comment: Gen. Bantz Craddock is voicing his opinion. President Obama and his advisers have a contrary point of view.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Veterans of U.S. Diplomacy Try to Revive Nuclear Arms Talks With Russia

Source: U.S. Department of Defense. (Project America)

From The New York Times:

MOSCOW — Three former American secretaries of state and a former secretary of defense were in Moscow on Thursday for informal meetings with top Russian officials in an attempt to pull relations between the United States and Russia out of a tailspin before the countries’ presidents meet for the first time next month.

The flurry of so-called track two diplomacy by figures outside government was another gesture of outreach to Russia. A month ago, the Obama administration sent a letter proposing a dialogue on curbing Iran’s nuclear ambitions that could diminish American needs for a missile defense system in Eastern Europe.

Read more ....

My Comment: There is no longer a possibility of a nuclear arms race with Russia. Both the U.S. and Russia are financially tied down .... and the political leadership in both Moscow and Washington do not have the stomach to expand their nuclear forces to a level that it was 20 or 30 years ago.

Lets face it .... those days are gone.

But both sides do want to reduce their forces. They also want to save some money, and to feel secure while doing it.

Sending the old diplomats from Washington to meet the old diplomats in Moscow will probably do the trick.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Medvedev To Talk Nonproliferation, Ties At Talks With Obama

From RIA Novosti:

MOSCOW, March 10 (RIA Novosti) - Russia's president said on Tuesday he would discuss all issues on the bilateral agenda, including nonproliferation, with the U.S. President when they meet in London on April 1.

Dmitry Medvedev and new U.S. leader Barack Obama will meet for the first time on the sidelines of the G20 summit of world leaders to address the financial crisis.

Media reports said earlier Washington had sought Russian help in resolving the nuclear dispute with Iran, and could in turn drop its plans to deploy a missile shield in Europe, strongly opposed by Moscow.

Both Moscow and Washington have officially denied the possibility of such a deal.

Read more ....

My Comment: I am not optimistic on these talks. But a lot can happen between now and April 1.