Current Affairs Poland and Czech Republic possible partners in new US defence plans
The Czech Foreign Minister Jan Kohout was in New York on Monday for talks with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. On the table: possible future cooperation in US missile defence, a move to apparently reassure US partners in Europe that the US wasn’t abandoning the region even if it had scrapped plans for radar and rocket installations in the Czech Republic and Poland.
Plans for a US tracking radar in the Czech Republic may have been scrapped
but that doesn’t necessarily mean an end to cooperation with the Czech
Republic on missile defence. On Monday the Czech Foreign Minister Jan
Kohout met with his counterpart Hillary Clinton in New York to discuss new
possibilities and already it appears the Czech Republic and Poland could
have a good chance of cooperating on a new US system: a mobile anti-rocket
project which could be put into operation within the next six years or so.
That message was put forward not only by Mrs Clinton but also earlier by
Defense Secretary Robert Gates, though one should keep in mind it’s early
days. On Monday Czech Foreign Minister Jan Kohout stressed it was important
to keep things in perspective: nothing had been decided or set in stone
yet:
“For now it’s important to see this as a symbolic political gesture towards Poland and the Czech Republic and as a reaction to the media that largely reported that US missile defence was being scrapped. But the US is not giving up in this area and we’ve been given guarantees. But more concrete steps have not - and could not have - been taken at this time.”
Jan Kohout, Hillary Clinton, photo: CTK
Why, in the end, did the US decide to drop earlier plans for permanent
installations? The Obama administration explained it had examined new
intelligence, had reassessed the Iran threat and opted for a new system it
says will be more effective. The move nevertheless shocked some in the
Czech Republic, namely those who had invested political capital in the
project over the last three years. Oldřich Bureš, a specialist on
security issues and Russia said the US offer on future cooperation could
take some, if not all, of the sting out of last week’s decision.
“For the future, the US concessions that have thus far been offered are not en par to the humiliation that was dealt to the Czech Republic and Poland in particular. Concessions will definitely be offered but whether they will be able to offset the current political damage, I am not so sure.”
So far, say many observers, it is Russia (long opposed to the radar in the Czech Republic) who appears to be the greatest benefactor from the change in US plans. The new mobile US system is at least several years off, say specialists, so there isn’t even great reason for Moscow to voice opposition - yet. Nor will Moscow necessarily come forward with any concessions of its own. Oldřich Bureš again:
Barack Obama
“In Moscow they are portraying it as a unilateral concession from
Washington which doesn’t necessarily need a counter-offer. I would argue
that President Obama understands the world in slightly different terms than
either Prime Minister Putin or President Medvědev. I would say that Moscow
play a more realist game of power politics where if one wins, the other
loses. Obama’s view is a more non-zero sum game, where if we make enough
concessions everyone will be happy. To me, in the long-term, these two
world views are fundamentally opposed. I don’t think that concessions to
Russia will necessarily generate the response that Mr Obama hopes to get.
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