Putin turns tables on Bush with new missile plan
HEILIGENDAMM, Germany, June 7 (Reuters) Russian President Vladimir Putin turned the tables today on Washington by suggesting the United States use a Russian-controlled radar instead of US anti-missile hardware in central Europe.
At a meeting with US President George W Bush during a Group of Eight summit, Putin proposed that the United States and Russia jointly use a radar in Azerbaijan as part of an anti-missile shield that would protect all of Europe.
''We can do this automatically, and hence the whole system which is being built as a result will cover not only part of Europe but the entire Europe without an exception,'' Putin said.
''This would also ... allow us not to redirect our rockets (to targets in Europe) and, on the contrary, allow us to create conditions for joint work,'' he said.
In his comments to reporters, Bush did not directly mention the radar plan which may have taken the White House by surprise.
''He made some interesting suggestions,'' Bush remarked.
Putin vowed last week to target Europe if Washington pressed ahead with its central European missile shield plan. Washington has accused Russia of being uncooperative but Putin's plan would seem to undermine that criticism.
A Kremlin spokesman explained Putin's suggestion of using a Russian-operated radar in Azerbaijan would remove the need for any US radar in Eastern Europe.
Washington says it wants to deploy 10 interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar in the Czech Republic as defence against projectiles launched by ''rogue'' states.
The project has infuriated Moscow which says it will upset the global strategic balance and could be used to launch attack missiles or to spy on Russia. Washington denies this.
FIRST MEETING Yevgeny Volk, head of the Moscow office of the Heritage Foundation, a US think tank, told Reuters Putin's proposal was a ruse designed to stop the United States basing elements of its anti-missile defence systems in eastern Europe.
''It looks like an attempt to divert discussion into a side street and make proposals that will hardly be acceptable to the United States.'' It was the two presidents' first one-on-one meeting since Putin launched an attack on the Bush administration at a conference in February, where he accused Washington of trying to force its will on the world and become its ''single master''.
White House national security adviser Stephen Hadley told reporters Putin's idea of using a Soviet-era radar system in Azerbaijan was ''a bold proposal''. US officials would study the offer and discuss it with the Russians.
''We hope that these consultations will not serve as a cover to some unilateral action,'' Putin said.
The Qabala radar, one of the biggest in the world, has operated in north of Azerbaijan since 1985. It scans the whole of the Indian Ocean, the West Asia and most of North Africa -- and can detect missiles lauched in those areas.
It is still manned by Russian military, who lease it off the Azeris.
REUTERS SYU RK2305


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