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Bush Reiterates: Russia Neither Enemy, nor Threat
'Pakistan
Times' Monitoring Desk
HEILIGENDAMM (Germany): President Bush on
Wednesday discounted Vladimir Putin's threat to retarget missiles on Europe,
saying "Russia's not going to attack Europe."
Bush, in an interview with media said no U.S. military response was required
after Putin warned that Russia would take steps in response to a U.S.
missile shield that would be deployed in Poland and the Czech Republic.
"Russia is not an enemy," Bush said, seeking not to inflame a heated
exchange of rhetoric between Washington and Moscow. "There needs to be no
military response because we're not at war with Russia. ... Russia is not a
threat. Nor is the missile defense we're proposing a threat to Russia."
Bush spoke before heading off to lunch with German Chancellor Angela Merkel,
who is hosting the annual meeting of the world's seven richest industrial
democracies and Russia. Merkel has made global warming the centerpiece of
her G-8 leadership and is pushing for specific targets for reducing carbon
emissions.
The meeting is being held under tight security on the Baltic Sea coast in
northern Germany. Police used water cannons to scatter an estimated 10,000
demonstrators who swarmed a seven-mile fence that encircles the site. At one
section, hundreds of protesters chanted "Peace" and "Free G-8! Free G-8!"
Bush, who met with reporters for nearly an hour in a sun-drenched garden,
also discussed Iran, the suffering in Darfur, global warming and this week's
sentencing of a former White House aide.
The president said he would like to see other countries follow the United
States in taking steps against the government of Sudan to stop the misery in
Darfur.
"I'm frustrated because there are still people suffering and the U.N.
process is moving at a snail's pace," Bush said.
Bush announced tighter U.S. sanctions on Sudan last week. He also is seeking
a U.N. resolution to apply new international sanctions against the Sudanese
government.
Climate Change
On climate change, Bush said he would not give ground on global warming
proposals that would require mandatory caps on greenhouse gas emissions.
Instead, he backed his own idea for the United States and other nations that
spew the most greenhouse gases to meet and — by the end of next year — set a
long-term strategy for reducing emissions.
Merkel has proposed a "two-degree" target, under which global temperatures
would be allowed to increase no more than 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, (2 degrees
Celsius) before being brought back down. Practically, experts have said that
means a global reduction in emissions of 50 percent below 1990 levels by
2050. Merkel supports a global carbon-trading market as one tool.
Bush also met with Japan's new prime minister Shinzo Abe and discussed North
Korea's pledge to close its sole nuclear reactor in exchange for economic
aid and political concessions. "There is a common message here and that is:
We expect North Korea to honor agreements," Bush said.
While North Korea topped Bush's talks with Abe, the president's plan to
deploy an anti-missile radar system in the Czech Republic and 10 interceptor
missiles in Poland is likely to be a key topic in Bush's meeting Thursday
with Putin.
Asked if he anticipated a tense encounter, Bush replied "Could be. I don't
think so ... I'll work to see that it's not a tense meeting."
Putin has accused the U.S. of starting a new arms race and said if the U.S.
pressed ahead with its plan, Russia would revert to targeting its missiles
on Europe as it did during the Cold War. China joined Russia in saying the
missile defense plan could touch off a new escalation in nuclear weapons.
The move to put the missile defense shield in former Warsaw Pact nations —
purportedly as a defense against a future missile launch from Iran — clearly
fanned Putin's anger.
Pressure on Iran
Bush cited Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's declaration that it was
"too late" to stop Iran's nuclear program as justification for the U.S.
missile defense system. "Therefore, let's build a missile defense system,"
Bush said, adding that it was time to return to the U.N. Security Council to
tighten pressure on Iran "to give up its suspected weapons program".
Bush also has angered Putin in the past by criticizing Russia's spotty
progress on democratic reform and human rights — a theme Bush expressed in a
speech just one day ago. Bush said that despite all the problems, the United
States has a friendship with Russia. He suggested Putin's recent rhetoric
could be calculated mostly for internal political consumption in Russia.
"There will be disagreements," said Bush, who has invited Putin to meet him
in July in Kennebunkport, Maine, the home of his father, former President
George H.W. Bush. "That's the way life works."
Protests at Summit
According to another report, Police used water cannons to scatter
stone-throwing demonstrators Wednesday as several thousand protesters
swarmed a 12-kilometer (seven-mile) fence surrounding the G-8 summit.
An estimated 10,000 demonstrators had reached the fence by early afternoon,
police said.
Other protesters blocked roads leading from the airport to the summit site
of Heiligendamm on the Baltic Sea coast in northern Germany as leaders began
arriving on the first day of the three-day summit. Police said the fence was
not breached at any point.
The leaders of the eight industrialized nations including U.S. President
George W. Bush, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Russian President Putin and
British Prime Minister Blair will discuss environment and other issues on
agenda of the summit.●
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