Logo Russian Nuclear Non-Proliferation Site Russian Nuclear Non-Proliferation Site
Citizens' Center on Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Home   Russian
Search for:
Exclusive | Archive | Publications | About us | Links | Forum | Guestbook

News.bbc.co.uk,
7 February 2010

Romania "to host U.S. missile shield"

Romania has agreed to host missile interceptors as part of a new US defence shield, its president says.

President Traian Basescu said the plan was approved by the defence council. It still needs parliamentary approval.

The US scrapped a previous missile shield, based in Poland and the Czech Republic, which had infuriated Russia.

Instead the new system would provide better defence from "the emerging threat" of Iranian short- and medium-range missiles, a US official said.

Mr Basescu said the system would "protect the whole of Romania`s territory", but stressed that it "is not directed against Russia".

He said Romania will host "ground capabilities to intercept missiles" that would be operational by 2015 if approved by parliament.

Smaller system

In the US, state department spokesman PJ Crowley also stressed that the new system was "not a capability that is directed at Russia".

Romania has agreed to host anti-ballistic missile interceptors as part of the administration`s "new missile defence plan... to protect US forward-deployed troops and our NATO allies against current and emerging ballistic missile threats from Iran," he said.

Mr Obama`s decision to abandon the original plan in September was greeted with enthusiasm in Russia, and came amid attempts to "reset" the relationship between Washington and Moscow.

The anti-ballistic missile shield favoured by former President George W Bush would be replaced by a reconfigured system designed to shoot down short- and medium-range missiles, Mr Obama announced.

He said intelligence suggested Iran was concentrating on shorter-range, not intercontinental, missiles.

The Bush administration plans had infuriated Russia, which threatened to train nuclear warheads on Poland the Czech Republic in response.

The new system is built around ship- and land-based SM-3 missile interceptors.

In October, US Vice-President Joseph Biden visited Poland, Romania and the Czech Republic seeking support for the new system.

Poland has already signed up.


Your opinion (comments to the article)?


Your name:

Your comments:

Please enter the code exactly as shown in image format.



More:

  • U.S. to Advance European Missile Shield With Radar Base Deal. Global Security Newswire, 16 August 2010

  • Strategic Weapons: Pakistani Ballistic Missile Arsenal. Strategy Page, 12 May 2010

  • Russia worried by U.S. missile defence plan. Agence France-Presse, 1 March 2010

  • Is the Missile Defense Agency`s logo Obama-meets-Islam?. By Al Kamen, The Washington Post, 27 February 2010

  • Russia says may deploy missiles in Baltic region. By Terhi Kinnunen, Dmitry Solovyov, Reuters, 21 February 2010

  • Arms Control Pact Would Not Restrict Missile Defenses, U.S. Says. Global Security Newswire, 13 February 2010

  • India successfully tests nuclear-capable missile. By Muneeza Naqvi, The Associated Press & The Washington Post, 7 February 2010

  • Rambler's Top100 Ðåéòèíã@Mail.ru ñÎÄÅËÓ ÃÉÔÉÒÏ×ÁÎÉÑ
    Exclusive | Archive | Publications | About us | Links | Forum | Guestbook
    Home   Up   Back

    General Post Office, P.B. 25211, Krasnoyarsk, 600000. Russia.
    e-mail: ccnnp@yandex.ru, NuclearNo.com
    © 2000. Design: NuclearNo.ru