MOSCOW: It was once a major bone of contention that seemed to threaten a resumption of Cold War tensions between Moscow and Washington.
But in yet another sign of how the world has changed, Russia muttered barely a word of protest on Wednesday following the announcement by President Bush that the United States will begin deploying interceptor missiles for a national missile defence system within two years.
Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov, on an official visit to Japan, made what one analyst called a “flaccid” statement of regret, but mostly Russian officials passed over the US decision in silence.
In a brief, mildly worded communique, the Foreign Ministry said it regretted the US decision and hoped that the United States would put its main focus on developing a new strategic relationship with Russia, rather than engaging in a “destabilizing strategic defensive arms race, including in space.” It said that the creation of a missile shield should not distract resources “from real challenges and threats — primarily international terrorism.”
At the St. Petersburg summit between Bush and Russian President Vladimir V. Putin in May, Russia abandoned any active protest of the proposed US national missile defence. It was part of an overall package of agreements in which the two countries agreed to a strategic relationship that would include closer cooperation and consultation and deep, mutually agreed cuts in offensive nuclear weapons.
Nevertheless, the US stance to build a national missile defence represents a sharp turning point from arms pacts negotiated more than three decades ago, and it still arouses resentment among some officials here.
All defensive missiles were banned by the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty, one of the cornerstones of detente between the United States and the Soviet Union and the base for subsequent arms treaties. But as Bush came to office in 2001, he argued that the ABM treaty had outlived its usefulness and that the risk that rogue states or terrorists might get their hands on nuclear weapons made it imperative for the US to withdraw from the treaty.
At first, Russia objected vociferously. Some hardline generals even threatened to resume deploying multi-warhead missiles that could defeat any proposed US missile defence. But the objections gradually subsided, as Putin and his advisers concluded it would be better to focus on winning other concessions from the United States in the area of offensive nuclear weapons rather than a futile fight to preserve a treaty that the United States was determined to break.
Putin’s quick decision to rally to the support of the United States after the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, and the new US focus on the ‘war against terrorism’, also pushed the two nations’ differences over missile defence into the background.
“I think the serious strategic debates on the topic ... ended long ago,” said Ivan Safranchuk, director of the Russian branch of the international think tank, the Center for Defence Information on Wednesday.
He said the two sides had already agreed to disagree, “which allows the Americans to go ahead and build while Russia can go on expressing its disgruntlement without any serious counter-moves or threats.”
Safranchuk said while the grousing may go on, it was more significant that Putin himself had not said a word about the US move announced on Tuesday and that the overall tone of the statement from the Foreign Ministry was not harsh.
“We are bound to hear more echoes of passive discontent from Russian officials during the future stages of the NMD development, but they in no way indicate that Russia is planning to do anything about it,” he concluded.
In Tokyo on Wednesday, Ivanov acknowledged to journalists that groups of countries might one day wish to join in setting up regional anti-ballistic missile defences.
Although that too could be potentially destabilizing, he said, it might be all right as long as all countries who wished to take part in the regional missile defence shields were free to do so.—Dawn/The Los Angles Times News Service.