Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Medvedev turns down US trade-off on Iran

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Medvedev turns down US trade-off on Iran

    Medvedev turns down US trade-off on Iran

    press tv
    Sat, 28 Mar 2009 15:23:00 GMT


    A trade-off of nuclear cooperation with Iran and missile defense plans
    is not taken seriously by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and
    officials in the Kremlin. The Kremlin has ruled out the possibility of
    a trade-off between nuclear cooperation with Iran and a controversial
    US missile defense system.

    In an exclusive interview with the BBC to be aired on Sunday, Russian
    President Dmitry Medvedev suggested that he does not think his
    American counterpart Barack Obama would agree to such an exchange.

    Obama's drive to reset relations with Moscow took a huge stride last
    month when reports claimed that the White House might forgo the
    defense shield in Eastern Europe if Moscow uses its relations with
    Iran and address US concerns about Tehran's nuclear efforts.

    "As for Iran, we have full relations with that country but our
    position is based on well-known UN resolutions and on the approach set
    out by the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency), namely that
    Iran's nuclear program should be peaceful. That's our position and we
    have always told Iran that," Medvedev said.

    "I don't think you can just trade one thing for another, this is not
    serious talk, but I have no doubt that we'll discuss both issues,
    missile defense and Iran's nuclear program. I believe that President
    Obama thinks the same way."

    "I don't think you can just trade one thing for another, this is not
    serious talk. I believe that President Obama thinks the same way,"
    Medvedev said.

    For years, Washington has accused Iran, a signatory to the nuclear
    Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), of developing nuclear weapons -- a
    charge roundly dismissed by the UN nuclear watchdog.

    The Russia president's remarks mark the second time the Kremlin turns
    down back-channel offer by the new US administration.

    "If we are talking about any "swap" [Iran for missile defense], this
    is not how the question is being put. This would not be productive,"
    Medvedev had said on March 3. "No one ing these issues to some kind of
    trade-offs, particularly on the Iranian issue."

    The US, under the rule of former President George W. Bush, devised
    plans to station 10 silo-based missiles in Poland and missile-tracking
    radar in the Czech Republic, to defend against a 'threat' allegedly
    originated from Iran.

    Russia, however, contends that such a system would encroach on its
    national interests and undermine its nuclear deterrent.

    The missile shield was the subject of fierce debate in the final
    months of the Bush administration, pushing Washington-Moscow relations
    to the lowest ebb since the Cold War.
Working...
X