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Russia to study U.S. anti-missile proposals: report

Other News Materials 7 November 2008 13:21 (UTC +04:00)

Russia will study Washington's proposals on an anti-missile system and on how to find a replacement for a key nuclear arms reduction treaty, Interfax quoted a Russian foreign ministry source as saying Friday.

The United States has sent Moscow proposals for a follow-on to the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) and on ways to ease Moscow's concerns over the anti-missile system that Washington wants to deploy in eastern Europe, reported Reuters.

"We have received these proposals and we will study them," Interfax news agency quoted the unidentified source as saying.

Russia's willingness to consider the proposals suggests it has not turned its back on talks with the United States, despite plans announced this week to station missiles near Poland in response to the U.S. missile defense system.

Russia wants to find a replacement for the 1991 START treaty, which set ceilings on the size of Russian and U.S. nuclear arsenals but expires in December 2008.

The Kremlin is deeply concerned by Washington's plans to deploy its anti-missile system in Poland and the Czech Republic.

President Dmitry Medvedev this week pledged to deploy missiles in the Kaliningrad region, which neighbors Poland, to counter the U.S. system. Moscow says the system is a direct threat to Russian national security.

The United States denies this and says it is intended to protect against "rogue" states like Iran.

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