US cancels missile defence system

The United States has effectively cancelled the final phase of a Europe-based missile defence system that was fiercely opposed by Russia and cited repeatedly by the Kremlin as a major obstacle to cooperation on nuclear arms reductions and other issues. Russian officials have so far declined to comment on the announcement, which was made in Washington by Defence Secretary Mr Chuck Hagel as part of a plan to deploy additional ballistic missile interceptors to counter North Korea. Much of the savings from cancelling the extra Europe-based defences will help fund those added interceptors. Aides to President Vladimir V Putin said there would be no reaction until early next week, when they expect to be briefed by American officials. But Russian news accounts quickly raised the possibility that the decision could portend a breakthrough in what has been a largely intractable dispute between Russia and the United States for years. A headline by the Itar-Tass news agency declared, “US abandons fourth phase of European missile defence system that causes the greatest objections from Russia.” Pentagon officials said those longstanding objections by Russia played no role in the decision to reconfigure the missile interceptor programme, which they said was based on the increased threat from North Korea, and on technological difficulties and budget considerations related to the Europe-based programme.

Not about Russia

“The missile defence decisions Secretary Mr Hagel announced were in no way about Russia,” George Little, a Pentagon spokesman, said. Still, other Obama administration officials acknowledged potential benefits if the decision is well-received in Moscow, as well as the possibility of continued objections given that the United States is not backing away from its core plan for a land-based missile shield programme in Central Europe.
“There’s still an absolutely firm commitment to European missile defence, which is not about Russia; it’s about Iran these days,” said a senior administration official who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “If there are side benefits that accrue with Russia, so be it. But that wasn’t a primary driver.”Regardless, some experts said it could help relations by eliminating what the Russians had cited as one of their main objections – the interceptors in the final phase of the missile shield that might have the ability to target long-range intercontinental ballistic missiles, which are part of Russian’s nuclear arsenal. The Obama administration has sought cooperation from Russia on numerous issues with varying degrees of success. Russia generally has supported the Nato-led military effort in Afghanistan, and has helped to restrict Iran’s nuclear programme by supporting economic sanctions. But the two countries have been deeply at odds over the war in Syria, and over human rights issues in Russia. Most recently, President Barack Obama has said he would like further reductions in the two countries’ nuclear arsenals, something Russia has said it would not consider without settling the dispute over missile defence. US experts insisted that the Russians’ concern over the anti-missile programme was exaggerated and that the system would not have jeopardised their strategic missiles, had the final phase been developed. But that Russian concern has now been addressed. “There is no threat to Russian missiles now,” said Mr Steven Pifer, an arms control expert who has managed Russia policy from top positions at the State Department and the National Security Council. In Washington, many officials have said they believe Russia’s real objections were not only about the particular capabilities of the missile shield but also about a more general political and strategic opposition to an expanding US military presence in Eastern Europe. Canceling only the final stage of the programme does not address that concern, so it is possib­le Russia’s position will remain unchanged. Mr Sean Kay, a professor at Ohio Wesleyan University and expert in international security issue and Russian relations, said the fourth stage of the Europe-based missile defence programme “was largely conceptual” and might never have been completed. Eliminating that portion of the programme made sense, Mr Kay said. “In effect, by sticking with a plan that was neither likely to work in the last stage but was creating significant and needless diplomatic hurdles at the same time, we gained nothing,” he said. At least some of the canceled interceptors were to have been based in Poland, which will still host less-advanced interceptors. In the past, efforts to restructure the anti-missile programme provoked sharp criticism in Poland, but this time reaction from Warsaw has been more muted. Analysts have said Poland’s main goal in hosting the interceptors has been having a US military presence there as a deterrent to Russia.

Source:  Deccan Herald 


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