Friday, December 18, 2009

Stop seeing West as threat, NATO chief tells Russia

Stop seeing West as threat, NATO chief tells Russia


Vietnam defense minister meets key US senators
Washington (AFP) Dec 15, 2009 - Vietnam's defense minister, making a rare visit to the United States, met Tuesday with a key US Senator who called ties between the two former war foes "very important." General Phung Quang Thanh met with Democratic Senator Jim Webb, who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on East Asia, and was to meet with Senator John McCain, the Senate Armed Services Committee's top Republican. "It is vitally important that the United States engage with Southeast Asia at all levels," Webb, a former Marine who served in the Vietnam war and visited Hanoi in August, said after his roughly 35-minute meeting. "I have worked for many years to build a bridge between Vietnam and the United States. It is a very important relationship," Webb said through a spokeswoman.

McCain is also a Vietnam war veteran who spent five and a half years as a prisoner after being shot down over Hanoi. Thanh also met with his US counterpart, Defense Secretary Robert Gates, and agreed to enhance military-to-military engagement through a formalized mechanism for both countries to discuss "issues of bilateral and regional concern" at senior defense levels, a Pentagon spokeswoman said. The countries will conduct the dialogue beginning in 2010, spokeswoman Maureen Schumann said. Vietnamese media have underlined that Thanh was just the second Vietnamese defense minister to visit the United States since the two countries normalized relations in 1995, 20 years after the Vietnam War. The visit came after a long-standing dispute between China and Vietnam over ownership of the Paracels and a more southerly archipelago, the Spratleys, escalated earlier this year.

Russia should stop seeing the West as a threat, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Thursday, as he called for a new partnership between Moscow and the transatlantic alliance. Relations between NATO and Moscow plunged to a post-Cold War low after the August 2008 war between Russia and Georgia, but Rasmussen has made improving ties a priority since coming to office in August.
"Let me make a very clear statement as secretary general of NATO. NATO will never attack Russia. Never," Rasmussen said in a speech to students at the country's top diplomatic university.
"And we don't think Russia will attack us either. We have stopped worrying about this and Russia should stop worrying about this as well," he told the students, who responded with applause.
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) was created at the start of the Cold War under the principle of collective defence, whereby members would jointly respond to any attack by an aggressor, at that time feared to be the Soviet Union.
If trust can be built between Moscow and NATO "then Russia can stop worrying about a menace from the West that simply doesn't exist," Rasmussen said.
"She can put her resources into defending against the real threats this country faces -- like terrorism, extremism, proliferation of missiles and weapons of mass destruction or drug trafficking."
His comments were warmly received by the audience. Nikita Mulovsky, 17, a diplomacy student, told AFP: "I don't believe NATO is a threat to Russia. I think we need to work together."
Rasmussen, who had met President Dmitry Medvedev and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin on Wednesday, said "the blueprints are already in place for a true security partnership between NATO and Russia."
He said a trusting relationship between Russia and the transatlantic alliance "has enormous potential to make Russia safer, to make the NATO allies safer and to make a real contribution to global security as well."
Rasmussen said that if his "vision" were fulfilled, by 2020 Russia and NATO would be able to link their missile systems to create a "genuine missile shield in the Euro-Atlantic area".
He strongly defended the eastward expansion of NATO, which he acknowledged was "clearly something which many in Russia see as a deliberate strategy to encircle this country."
Russia has bristled at the moves by former Soviet republics like Georgia and Ukraine to join NATO and was also fiercely opposed to the now-shelved US plan to deploy missile defence facilities in Central Europe.
The day earlier, Rasmussen had asked Russia to step up its cooperation on Afghanistan, asking Moscow to send more helicopters for the Afghan government and to help train more Afghan police and counter-narcotics officers.
Such steps would ease the burden on NATO as it struggles to put down a raging Taliban insurgency.
Russia did not immediately say whether it would agree to the NATO requests, with Medvedev simply ordering a review of Rasmussen's proposals.
"I believe that Afghanistan must be a centrepiece of our partnership in 2010," Rasmussen said in Thursday's speech.
Russia's envoy to NATO, Dmitry Rogozin, cautiously praised the secretary general's visit.
"We were not expecting any breakthroughs, nothing like this was planned. On the other hand, I think the fact of the visit itself was helpful," Rogozin told AFP after the speech.
NATO spokesman James Appathurai, who travelled to Moscow with Rasmussen, described the visit as successful.
"The mood in the meetings was definitely warmer than certainly what I have seen over the past few years," said Appathurai.
"There was a clear willingness on all sides to focus not just on what we don't like about each other, but also to focus on what we can do together."

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