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US abandons missile shield in Europe
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-09-17 22:51

PRAGUE/WARSAW: US President Barack Obama has told east European states he is abandoning plans for an anti-missile shield there, in a move that may ease Russian-US ties but fuel fears of resurgent Kremlin influence.

US abandons missile shield in Europe
A C300 anti-aircraft missile flies over head during an air defense exercise near the Black sea town of Shabla east of the Bulgarian capital Sofia, Friday, Sept. 4, 2009. [Agencies]
US abandons missile shield in Europe

Russia said it would welcome cancellation of the program, promoted by Obama's predecessor George W. Bush and now a source of tension overshadowing US efforts to enlist Kremlin support over Afghanistan, Iran and nuclear arms control.

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The Pentagon said the White House would be making a 'major announcement' on Thursday about the project, that had raised the prospect of multi-billion dollar contracts for US defense giants.

The shield, involving interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar complex in the Czech republic, was intended to defend against any long-range missile launches from "rogue" states. Russia saw it as a threat to its missile defenses and its overall security.

"Today, shortly after midnight, Barack Obama telephoned me to announce that his government is backing away from the intention of building a missile defense radar on Czech territory," Czech Prime Minister Jan Fischer told reporters.

A senior Polish source close to the negotiations said Warsaw had received a similar message.

A US defense official said Washington was now examining an alternative to the "large, fixed system" of the shield. He gave no details.

Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said the planned shield been based on the concern that Iran was determined to develop long-range intercontinental missile capability. Recent intelligence showed, however, that the Iranians were much more focused on developing short- and medium-range missiles.

Afghanistan

The Obama administration seeks to "reset" battered ties with Russia so that the two former Cold War foes can cooperate on Iran, on fighting Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan and on reducing their vast arsenals of nuclear weapons.

Washington has won permission to move trains carrying supplies for US forces across Russia via Central Asia to Afghanistan, avoiding routes through Pakistan that had come under frequent attack from the Taliban.

Diplomats in Moscow say Russian hardliners could read the shield backdown as a sign of US weakness.

That view was shared by John Bolton, a prominent hawk in the Bush administration.

"I think this is a near catastrophe for American relations with Eastern European countries and many in NATO," he said. "I think it was the kind of unilateral decision that the Bush administration was always criticized for and I think the clear winners are in Russia and Iran."

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