Heiligendamm, Germany - Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday offered the United States joint use of a radar station in Azerbaijan, saying this ensured better protection against an Iranian missile threat than US plans for a missile shield in Central Europe.
Russian and US diplomats said Putin made the proposal during bilateral talks with US President George W Bush at a Group of Eight (G8) summit in Heiligendamm.
Putin suggested that the US and Russia could jointly operate the radar station in Azerbaijan which is currently rented out to Moscow.
If the proposal was accepted by Washington, Russia would not need to retarget Europe in response to the US plan to station elements of a missile shield in Poland and the Czech Republic, according to the diplomats.
For his part, Bush described his talks with Putin as “open and constructive.”
“We will continue to talk about missile defence in the coming weeks,” said Bush.
The US president told reporters he wanted a “constructive and strategic dialogue” with his Russian counterpart.
Earlier, Bush went out of his way to take a conciliatory stance on Russia, saying that the missile defence dispute with Moscow was not something “we ought to be hyperventilating about.”
The US leader insisted that the US missile defence system was aimed at so-called “rogue states” like Iran and North Korea. “Russia is not an enemy of the US,” he underlined.
US-Russia relations have deteriorated rapidly since Putin denounced US “unilateralism” in February this year.
Since then the Russian leader has vented his anger over the US missile defence plan and threatened to withdraw from a key European security pact.
Putin sent alarm bells ringing this week by saying Russia would retarget Europe in retaliation over the missile defence shield.
Washington and Moscow also disagree over a United Nations plan for internationally-supervised independence for the breakaway Serb province of Kosovo.
6 comments for Putin offers Bush joint use of radar station in Azerbaijan »
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Can Putin aim one of those missles to Bushes head..wait a minute, there might be a video of this on youtube.. lol
Comment by John Doe — June 7, 2007 @ 9:42 am
This is awesome!
Comment by Martwin Wowzers — June 7, 2007 @ 9:48 am
The current situation reminds me of the Cuba missle crisis in reverse.
The U.S reacted when missles were placed in Cuba—Now the U.S wants to place missles near Russia. We cant have it both ways. This un-necessary provacation and our lack of understanding of Russia’s paranoia (which is over 75 yrs old) shows the same dis-respect we shower on Iraq and its customs—Its time for a new adminstration to show some
deep thinking and originality.
Comment by J. Daniels — June 7, 2007 @ 9:56 am
It makes so much sense, that only and idiot would turn it down.
Comment by Paul G. — June 7, 2007 @ 9:59 am
Nice chess move by Putin. Of course Putin will monitor that radars’ U.S. use as well. Europe will be interested in knowing why the U.S would refuse such a generous offer! Talk about a Reality show!! I LOVE it!!
Comment by Robin Martinez — June 7, 2007 @ 9:59 am
J. Daniels, you’re an idiot. The missiles in Cuba were nukes. The missiles in Europe are interceptor missiles to shoot down nukes in space. They are only supposed to be installing 5 interceptor missiles, so it would hardly put a dent in Russias arsenal of thousands. Putin is posturing, nothing more.
Comment by sacdsacsd — June 7, 2007 @ 2:13 pm