Medvedev: Arms control deal with U.S. can be reached
November 9, 2009 - 0:0
MOSCOW (AP) -- Russia and the United States have a good chance of reaching a new nuclear arms reduction deal before year's end, but other nuclear powers must join disarmament efforts, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said in remarks released Saturday.
Medvedev also told Germany's Der Spiegel magazine he has been working well with his predecessor Vladimir Putin, and predictions of a rift between him and Putin — widely seen as pulling the strings in Russia — are overblown. The Kremlin released a transcript of the comments.“No one must have any doubts that our 'tandem' has been working quite harmoniously,” Medvedev said. “As you can see, predictions that we will have a falling out so far have failed to materialize.”
The U.S.-Russian arms control talks are moving at a good pace, Medvedev said.
“We have every chance to agree on a new treaty, determine new (weapons) levels and control measures and sign a legally binding document in the end of the year,” he said in remarks released by the Kremlin.
He sounded less upbeat about the prospect of the complete abolition of nuclear weapons.
Russia and the United States both say they are committed to negotiating a successor deal to their 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty. That arms reduction treaty has gradually slashed both sides' arsenals but is set to expire Dec. 5.
In July, U.S. President Barack Obama and Medvedev agreed that the current talks should reach an accord to reduce both countries' arsenals to between 1,500 and 1,675 nuclear weapons within seven years.
Medvedev told Der Spiegel that other nuclear powers have been reluctant to join in disarmament efforts.
“A nuclear-free world is our shared ideal for which we must aspire, but a road to that is difficult,” he said. “It takes not just the United States and Russia renouncing nuclear weapons, but other countries as well.”
Putin anointed Medvedev as his preferred successor and moved into the prime minister's job after the 2008 presidential election. Putin said in September that he and Medvedev would “come to an agreement” on who would run for president in the 2012 election, leading to speculation that the two would decide on a predetermined winner.
Medvedev maintained that Putin meant to say they would discuss who should run for president to “avoid elbowing each other.”
“He did not say that we would decide between us who will be the next president,” Medvedev said. “This would be ridiculous.”
“I do not wish to one day find myself and Vladimir Putin resembling the aged leaders from the Soviet Communist Party Politburo standing on Lenin's Mausoleum in similar coats and hats.”
Medvedev has championed the rule of law and civil rights, but critics say he has remained in Putin's shadow and failed to add substance to his pledges.
Asked to comment on Putin's famous remark that the Soviet collapse represented “the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century,” Medvedev challenged his mentor.
He said the Soviet breakup was a “serious, dramatic” event, but added that World War II and the 1917 Bolshevik revolution were real catastrophes.
Medvedev also set himself apart from Putin by sharply criticizing the rule of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin.
“From the point of view of the law, killing of a huge number of compatriots for political or unsubstantiated economic motives is a crime,” he told Der Spiegel. “The rehabilitation of those involved in these crimes is impossible, no matter what economic achievements were made then and how well the state mechanism was built.”
Also Medvedev said that his “Russophobe” Ukrainian counterpart Viktor Yushchenko was the sole reason for the decline in relations between the two countries, AFP reported.
Everything Yushchenko had done in recent years had worked to damage traditional links between Russia and Ukraine, Medvedev said.
“We have a very difficult relationship with Ukraine, but this is not a dispute between the two societies,” he said.
“To be quite honest, all the controversy and all the problems are related to one person: the current president of Ukraine,” he said.
“He is under the influence of Russophobe ideas. Everything he has done in recent years has damaged the traditional links between Ukraine and Russia.”
The comments are the latest rebuke Medvedev has delivered to the Ukrainian leader.
In August Medvedev attacked what he called Ukraine's “anti-Russian” attitude and announced Moscow would not be sending a new ambassador to Kiev because of Yushchenko's policies.
Russia-Ukraine relations have deteriorated since Yushchenko's election in 2005 in the wake of the Orange Revolution that ousted the old pro-Moscow elite in Ukraine.
Yushchenko set his country on a course towards membership of NATO and the European Union that angered Russia.
Disputes over Ukrainian payments for Russian gas have also soured relations, and last week Putin warned that European gas supplies could be interrupted if Ukraine failed to pay.