TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 2007
14:20 MECCA TIME, 11:20 GMT
US missile shield 'could be target'
The United States wants to base 10 interceptor missiles in Poland [File: GALLO/GETTY]
A senior Russian general has warned that a United States plan to base a missile defence shield in Poland and the Czech Republic could make its former allies a potential target.
General Nikolai Solovtsov, the head of Russian missile forces, made the statement as the Czech and Polish leaders indicated they were prepared to host the US system.
"If the governments of Poland and the Czech Republic take such a step ... the strategic missile forces will be capable of targeting these facilities if a relevant decision is made," Solovtsov said.
He also said the US plan could upset strategic stability in the region.
Mirek Topolanek, the Czech prime minister, and Jaroslaw Kaczynski, his Polish counterpart, indicated in Warsaw that they were ready to work out the conditions under which the US would put 10 interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar station in the Czech Republic.
Topolanek said: "We agreed that both countries will probably give a positive response to the US letter, and only then will we open negotiations.
"I think it is in our joint interest to negotiate this initiative and to build ... the missile defence," he said.
Interceptors
US officials say that the 10 proposed interceptors - designed to stop a launch from the Middle East - are not aimed at Russia.
Russia, with a large nuclear arsenal, could easily defeat such a small system simply by launching more than 10 missiles.
But Solovtsov, speaking at a news conference in Moscow that started just before the announcement in Warsaw, voiced concern that Washington could boost the number in the future.
He also said Russia could easily make new, upgraded versions of Russian missiles scrapped under the intermediate range nuclear forces (INF) treaty, negotiated 1987.
Kaczynski brushed aside Moscow's fears, saying "the missile defence is not directed against any normal state."
Russia reportedly sees the move as payback for their sales of air defence missiles to Iran and Syria, and as an attempt to bind Nato members Poland and the Czech Republic, more tightly into the military alliance.
Incoming warheads
Last month, Lieutenant General Henry Obering, director of the US missile defence agency, said the bases in Poland and the Czech Republic would be designed to intercept missiles being developed by Iran.
Two other bases - at Fort Greely, Alaska, and Vandenberg Air Force Base in California - would protect the US from threats from North Korea, Obering said.
Critics of the system say it has not adequately been tested to prove it works.
The interceptor missiles launch a small EKV, or exoatmospheric kill vehicle, designed to collide with an incoming warhead at high speed.
Obering has said that there was no way the limited number of interceptors could neutralise the hundreds of missiles at Russia's disposal.
Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
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