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US, Russian defense chiefs have long
meeting over ties
Reuters, WASHINGTON
Friday, Sep 17, 2010, Page 7
US and Russian defense chiefs commiserated about ˇ§painfulˇ¨
military reforms and signed accords on Wednesday stepping up dialogue, gestures
that aimed to show improving ties between the former Cold War foes.
US Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Russian Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov
also discussed thorny issues during their series of talks, including US plans
for a missile defense system in Europe and Russiaˇ¦s ceasefire with Georgia.
There were no breakthroughs on those issues.
Five-hour meet
However, the talks were portrayed positively by both men, who were to dine
together on Wednesday evening on a US Navy barge in the Potomac River ˇX capping
off more than five hours of meetings in a single day, an unusual amount of
Gatesˇ¦ time for any foreign dignitary, aides say.
ˇ§I do hope that my visit to the United States will provide a very powerful
impetus to the development of relations between our two nations,ˇ¨ Serdyukov told
reporters.
Gates said the accords they signed would ensure more frequent meetings between
the two defense chiefs ˇX at least one a year ˇX and pave the way for more joint
programs, exchanges and exercises between the two nationsˇ¦ militaries.
Ties between the US and Russia have been slowly recovering since tensions over
Russiaˇ¦s 2008 war with the pro-Western former Soviet republic of Georgia. US
President Barack Obama took office last year seeking to ˇ§resetˇ¨ relations.
Proponents say Obamaˇ¦s efforts helped win Russian support for sanctions on Iran
as well as on military supply routes for the Afghan War. It also yielded a new
US-Russian arms reduction treaty, which faces an uncertain path to approval in
the full US Senate.
A key Senate committee was expected yesterday to approve the treaty, which
commits Russia and the US to reduce deployed nuclear warheads by about 30
percent. However, some Republicans are putting up a fight, and a full Senate
vote is not expected until after November congressional elections.
A senior US defense official, briefing reporters after the talks, said Russiaˇ¦s
lower house of parliament, the Duma, was awaiting US action before pursuing
ratification further.
ˇ§Theyˇ¦ve had some preliminary hearings, but decided theyˇ¦re going to let the
Senate go first,ˇ¨ the official said.
Painful
Gates and Serdyukov both used the word ˇ§painfulˇ¨ to describe reforms they are
pursuing in their militaries, belt-tightening that has defense industry
executives and military commanders girding for leaner times, globally.
In the US, Gates has announced controversial plans to shut down an entire
military command and ax at least 50 officers and 150 senior civilian executive
posts, efforts meant to help save US$100 billion over five years.
Serdyukov, who analysts say is unpopular among much of the military, is pursuing
far more dramatic cuts in the number of Russian officers and the size of
Russiaˇ¦s armed forces.
ˇ§He and I face similar leadership challenges,ˇ¨ Gates told reporters, with
Serdyukov sitting beside him. ˇ§We are both working hard to achieve sweeping,
sometimes painful, but very necessary reforms in our respective militaries.ˇ¨
Analysts say the amount of time Gates set aside for his Russian counterpart was
a message in itself. Serdyukov is the first Russian defense minister to set foot
in the Pentagon in more than five years.
Quality time
ˇ§This is a lot of quality time with Secretary Gates,ˇ¨ said Heather Conley at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington-based think tank.
Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell said he believed calls for deeper ties by
Gates and Serdyukov ˇ§sends a very strong signal through their respective
organizations that they expect greater cooperation down the chain.ˇ¨
US officials also said they were talking with Moscow about allowing lethal cargo
for the Afghan War to travel along Russian rail routes, currently limited to
non-lethal cargo.
Still, difficulties remain, including on issues like missile defense and
Georgia. A US defense official said Russia did not back away from its concerns
over US missile defense efforts in Europe.
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