
U.S. Will Study Russian Missile Defense Proposals
By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
BRUSSELS, Belgium, June 7, 2000 -- Russian leaders agreeing
there is a threat of missile attack from rogue states marks
a “significant change in the attitude and understanding” of
the U.S. push for a national missile defense, Defense
Secretary William S. Cohen said.
Cohen, speaking en route to NATO meetings here, said he
would discuss Russian President Vladimir Putin’s proposals
with the NATO allies.
“Just a few weeks ago, [the Russian] officials' position
was that there is no threat, or that the threat was largely
exaggerated,” Cohen said. “From what I have read, the
Russian president now believes there is a threat.” Cohen is
due to meet Russian Defense Minister Igor Sergeyev at the
NATO meetings and then travel to Moscow for bilateral
meetings with his counterpart.
Cohen said Putin’s proposal for an alternative missile
defense program is vague. “The devils are always in the
details,” he said. He said the Russian idea could be a
constructive proposal, “but it could be a tactic to divide
the European members of NATO from the United States.”
He said the United States would look at exactly what Putin
has proposed before making an assessment.
The United States has proposed a limited National Missile
Defense program that would counter threats from rogue
states with a small number of ICBMs. It has sought to amend
the 1972 Anti-ballistic Missile Treaty with the former
Soviet Union in order to build that defense system. U.S.
officials have repeatedly stated the program in no way is
aimed at countering Russia’s nuclear arsenal.