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Obama to tell Putin: Time to move past Cold War

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WASHINGTON – Days from his first Moscow summit, President Barack Obama declared Thursday that former Russian President Vladimir Putin "still has a lot of sway" in his nation and needs an in-person reminder the Cold War is over.

On next week's trip, Obama will meet not only with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev but with Putin, the prime minister who hand-picked Medvedev as his successor. Said Obama: "I think that it's important that even as we move forward with President Medvedev that Putin understand that the old Cold War approaches to U.S.-Russian relations is outdated. ... Putin has one foot in the old ways of doing business and one foot in the new."

In a wide-ranging interview with The Associated Press, Obama also:

• Said he could see abandoning his own proposal to indefinitely hold some terror detainees _"it gives me great pause" — and said he would not be comfortable ordering such a disposition for Guantanamo Bay prisoners without congressional action.

• In light of recent Supreme Court cases dealing with highly charged questions about the nation's racial progress, said the high court was "moving the ball" away from affirmative action but noted the justices had not foreclosed the continued use of racial preferences in hiring and college admissions, which he said he supports in some circumstances. In any case he said affirmative action is neither the panacea — nor the problem — that it's often made out to be.

• With most experts in agreement that there's a good chance Iran could have a usable nuclear bomb sometime during his presidency, he said, "I'm not reconciled with that."

Asked about Michael Jackson's death, an event that has transfixed many, Obama said he didn't see any controversy in the fact that he did not issue a formal public statement about the pop star and knew of no dissatisfaction among blacks about that. He said, "I know a lot of people in the black community and I haven't heard that."

He called Jackson a brilliant performer — "I still have all his stuff on my iPod" — whose talents were paired with a tragic, sad personal life. "I'm glad to see that he is being remembered primarily for the great joy that he brought to a lot of people through his extraordinary gifts as an entertainer," Obama said.

The 24-minute interview, with Obama nearly six months into his job and approval ratings still high, ranged from the serious to the silly.

Asked to let Americans in on a secret about White House life, the president chose the pastry chef and rued that "the best pie I have ever tasted" is a challenge to the first couple's self-discipline and waistlines. Asked to choose between basketball greats Kobe Bryant and Michael Jordan, Obama — a committed hoops player and fan of Jordan's Chicago Bulls — didn't pause for even a second. "Michael," he said, picking the retired superstar. "I haven't seen anybody match up with Jordan yet."

Scheduled to depart Sunday for a trip to Russia, an international summit in Italy and his first trip to Africa as president, Obama praised Moscow for its cooperation in international efforts to persuade North Korea and Iran to abandon their nuclear development programs. After North Korea conducted an underground nuclear test in May, the United Nations approved "the most robust sanction regime that we've ever seen with respect to North Korea," he said.

He expressed optimism he could get international agreement for even tougher action if North Korea persists in defying demands that it dismantle its nuclear weapons and stop production. The U.N. sanctions, for instance, did not include one thing the U.S. wanted: allowing the use of military force to board and inspect ships suspected of carrying banned weapons.

"In international diplomacy, people tend to want to go in stages," Obama said. "There potentially is room for more later."

The main agenda item for Obama and Russian President Medvedev in Moscow is to advance talks on a new strategic arms reduction treaty to replace one that expires in December.

In addition to sitting down with Medvedev, Obama also is meeting with Putin, the former president who now is prime minister but still a major force.

"I think that it's important that even as we move forward with President Medvedev that Putin understand that the old Cold War approaches to U.S.-Russian relations is outdated — that's it's time to move forward in a different direction," Obama said.

He said Medvedev understands that, but Putin needs convincing that the U.S. wants cooperation rather than "an antagonistic relationship."

On Afghanistan, Obama said he intends to reassess the possible need for additional U.S. troops after the nation holds national elections in August, but that he believes America's key goals can be met there "without us increasing our troop levels."

He has ordered 21,000 more troops to Afghanistan this summer, bringing the U.S. total to 68,000. He spoke on a day when 4,000 of those newly arrived Marines stormed through southern Afghanistan and when news surfaced that an American soldier who disappeared after walking off his base in eastern Afghanistan was believed captured.

Obama outlined his benchmarks for making any new decision about troops there: whether al-Qaida and other terrorist groups can set up safe havens in Afghanistan, whether the Afghan national army and police can secure the country without assistance, and whether the border with Pakistan can be made less porous.

"We can't tolerate a situation in which terrorist organizations act with impunity," he said.

Minutes before his vice president, Joe Biden, landed in Iraq for a two-day visit, Obama said he was confident — but not certain — that the timetables for removing U.S. troops from that war will hold. This week marked a major milestone in the war when U.S. troops pulled out of major Iraqi cities.

"I reserve the right to make changes based on changing circumstances to protect U.S. security," he said.

As for Guantanamo detainees, the former constitutional law teacher expressed doubts about his call to create a new legal framework to deal with terror suspects considered too dangerous to release but also impossible to prosecute, a potential major change in American jurisprudence.

"We're going to proceed very carefully on this front, and it may turn out that after looking at all the dimensions of this that I don't feel comfortable with the proposals," Obama said. "We don't have a tradition of detaining people without trial."

He added: "How we deal with those situations is going to be one of the biggest challenges of my administration."

Obama predicted that "a sizable number of" the suspected terrorists and foreign fighters now being held without charges at the prison in Cuba would get their day in court, either in civilian federal courts or military tribunals.

With prospects for congressional approval of "prolonged detention" murky, there has been talk that the White House might simply declare changes to be in effect.

"I am not comfortable with doing something this significant through executive order," Obama said.

The president spoke sympathetically at one point of the white firefighters in New Haven, Conn., who said they had been discriminated against and won their case this week before the Supreme Court.

He added that both the damage and benefits of affirmative action are overstated, saying that racial preferences in hiring or admissions could become "an afterthought" if problems such as malnutrition, poverty and substandard schools could be eliminated, creating a more level playing field among whites and minorities.

"I've always believed that affirmative action was less of an issue, or should be less of an issue, than it's made out to be," Obama said.

With joblessness rising, the president said he was "deeply concerned" that too many families are worried about "whether they will be next."

New government figures out Thursday showed the unemployment rate grew to 9.5 percent last month, and economists agree it is likely to rise into the double digits. Since Obama signed the $780 billion economic stimulus bill in February, the economy has shed more than 2 million jobs.

"What we are still seeing is too many jobs lost," said Obama.
 
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MIKE MCCARTHY

ARTICLE (July 04 2009): US President Barack Obama heads to Russia next week seeking to "reset" relations by finding ways to cooperate on a host of challenges, including confronting Iranian and North Korean nuclear ambitions. Obama is due to arrive Monday in Moscow to meet with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev ahead of travelling to the Group of Eight summit in Italy and a subsequent stop in Ghana.

Obama and Medvedev have both expressed hope that they can move beyond the strained ties of the past to find issues of mutual co-operation and to replace a nuclear arms-control agreement that expires in December. "The president made very clear that he wanted to establish a different kind of relationship with Russia," Mike McFaul, a senior advisor to Obama for Russian and Eurasian affairs, told reporters. "We want to actually do real business with the Russians on things that matter to our national security and our prosperity."

US officials have described the approach as an attempt to "reset" relations after ties worsened during George W Bush's presidency, mainly over US plans to deploy a missile-defence system to Eastern Europe and Moscow's military intervention last summer in Georgia.

Samuel Charap, a fellow at the Centre for American Progress, said that the conflict in Georgia left Washington and Moscow "incapable of discussing issues of mutual concern and managing differences." "The reset button was intended to ratchet down tensions and create an environment where the two countries could engage in productive discussions on the major issues facing them and facing the world," Charap said.

Obama's agenda will be full one when he sits down Monday with Medvedev and has breakfast Tuesday with Vladimir Putin, the influential prime minister. Obama wants Russia to take a tougher line with Iran over Tehran's refusal to halt uranium enrichment, and in response to North Korea's recent nuclear bomb and missile tests.

Obama has identified non-proliferation as a key area where the White House and Kremlin can work together to forge a more co-operative relationship. Obama will be seeking greater Russian support for the conflict in Afghanistan, including the possibility of moving military cargo through Russian territory.

Among the key sticking points are plans to base a missile defence system in Poland and the Czech Republic, and US support for allowing former Soviet states to join Nato. The missile shield plan was initiated by Bush to fend off Iran's growing missile capability, but Moscow has strongly opposed the idea, threatening to target Poland and the Czech Republic if they host the bases.

While the plan is under review by the Obama administration, McFaul said the United States will not abandon the plans solely to win Russian help in other areas. "We're not going to reassure or give or trade anything with the Russians regarding Nato expansion or missile defence," he said.

During an April speech in Prague, Obama warned of the threat posed by the proliferation of nuclear arms and talked of a world free of nuclear weapons, but for now Obama and Medvedev will focus on finding a replacement to the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, or START, which expires December 5.

That treaty limited both sides to a range of 1,700 to 2,200 nuclear warheads. Both sides currently have arsenals at the high end of the range. McFaul was optimistic that the two sides could go below those figures but said it stilll too early to propose a goal "That requires a lot of heavy lifting, and you can't get to the numbers ... until you know what you can verify," he said.
 
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Putin to tell Obama, "talk is cheap, get rid of missiles in Eastern Europe"
 
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Putin to tell Obama, "talk is cheap, get rid of missiles in Eastern Europe"

July 4, 2009
Russia Opens Route for U.S. to Fly Arms to Afghanistan


MOSCOW — The Russian government has agreed to let American troops and weapons bound for Afghanistan fly over Russian territory, officials on both sides said Friday. The arrangement will provide an important new corridor for the United States military as it escalates efforts to win the eight-year war.
The agreement, to be announced when President Obama visits here on Monday and Tuesday, represents one of the most concrete achievements in the administration’s effort to ease relations with Russia after years of tension. But the two sides failed to make a trade deal or resolve differences over missile defense, and are struggling to draft a preliminary nuclear arms deal.
The blend of success and stalemate leading to Mr. Obama’s visit suggests that it is easier to talk about a “reset” button than to press it. The promise of a new era of cooperation was always predicated on the tenuous notion that a change of tone and a shift in emphasis might be enough to bridge deep divisions. But even with both sides eager for warmer ties, the issues that have torn Washington and Moscow apart did not go away with the transition at the White House.
Mr. Obama is less enthusiastic than President George W. Bush was about an antimissile system in Eastern Europe or NATO membership for Ukraine and Georgia, but has not abandoned either goal, to the consternation of the Kremlin. Despite American pressure, Moscow has not yielded in its confrontation with Georgia a year after their brief war.
So Mr. Obama’s first visit here as president will be a test of his foreign policy. American officials said that the larger message was that if the Russians did not take his open hand, he would move on to other priorities.
But Mr. Obama faces a reservoir of resentment among Russians who believe that the United States has rarely followed through on such gestures. “There’s a lot of suspicion that this has been talk, talk, talk — let’s see some real action,” said Vladimir Pozner, a state television talk show host. “At this point, there is a little bit of hope and a lot of distrust.”
Richard R. Burt, a former American arms control negotiator and a member of a Russian-American group, Global Zero, that is pushing for nuclear disarmament, said Mr. Obama must overcome that suspicion. “I just get the sense that the Russians are kind of grumpy, so there’s still some sharpness on the Russian side, despite pushing the reset button,” he said.
At the same time, Mr. Obama faces pressure not to go soft on Russia. He sounded a tough note this week, saying Prime Minister Vladimir V. Putin still “has one foot in the old ways.” He is also sending Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. to Georgia and Ukraine after the summit meeting to show he will not abandon them.
“We’re not going to reassure or give or trade anything with the Russians regarding NATO expansion or missile defense,” said Michael McFaul, the president’s top adviser on Russia.
Georgian officials visiting Washington last week said that they had faith in the administration, but they expressed skepticism about a real change in relations. Russia maintains as many as 15,000 troops in two breakaway Georgian republics, despite a cease-fire agreement, and last month it used its veto to end the United Nations observer mission in one of them. Both Russia and NATO recently conducted war games in the region.
“Attempts by American officials to talk with them in a civilized manner are perceived as weakness,” Grigol Vashadze, Georgia’s foreign minister, said, comparing Mr. Putin to a bandit. “Of course you can talk with him. But in the end, you know the bandit will end up kicking you and taking your wallet.”
Looking for a breakthrough for his visit, Mr. Obama tried to cut a deal to finally admit Russia into the World Trade Organization. But days after Mr. Obama’s advisers visited Russia in June to discuss the idea, Mr. Putin unexpectedly suspended Moscow’s membership bid, dashing hopes for an announcement next week.
Russian officials said they were showing good faith, pointing to their suspension of the delivery of an S-300 air defense system to Iran. “In Moscow and in Washington, people have been known to lose opportunities,” said Mikhail V. Margelov, chairman of the foreign affairs committee of Russia’s upper house of Parliament. “We have to hope that this time we won’t lose the opportunity.”
The new airspace agreement represents an important step. Until now, Russia has restricted use of its territory for the Afghan war to railroad shipments of nonlethal supplies. Under the new arrangement, officials said, planes carrying lethal equipment and troops will be allowed to make as many as 10 flights a day, or thousands a year over Russia.
The agreement was a priority for Mr. Obama, who has ordered 21,000 more American troops to Afghanistan. Supply routes through Pakistan have been troubled by that nation’s increasing volatility. Uzbekistan evicted American troops from a base in 2005, and Kyrgyzstan threatened to do the same, until American negotiators persuaded it to reverse itself, in a deal that increases the rent.
But with Mr. Obama about to depart for Moscow, negotiators were still hashing out a preliminary agreement on nuclear arms cuts to announce along with President Dmitri A. Medvedev. The agreement would lay out parameters of a treaty to be drafted by the end of the year to replace the expiring cold war Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty.
Negotiators are talking about setting a range of perhaps 1,500 to 1,700 warheads (down from 2,200 now allowed under treaty) and 500 to 1,100 delivery vehicles (down from 1,600 currently allowed). But they have not settled on the numbers, and Russia wants to link the issue to missile defense.
The two sides have agreed to create a new standing commission with subgroups on issues like climate change to work between presidential meetings. The Obama team at first proposed a new version of a commission in the 1990s named for Vice President Al Gore and Prime Minister Viktor S. Chernomyrdin. But the Russians refused to pair Mr. Putin with Mr. Biden. “Putin’s not a vice president,” an American official quoted the Russians as saying.
“This is like a midsemester report card,” said Sarah E. Mendelson, a scholar at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, who is organizing a conference on civil society here that Mr. Obama and perhaps Mr. Medvedev will attend. “It’s not looking like an A, but it’s not a D either.”
By PETER BAKER
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/04/w...te for U.S. to Fly Arms to Afghanistan&st=cse

Russian officials said they were showing good faith
Or, are they ?
 
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