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American-Russian relations: from confrontation to alliance
Last updated: 9 September 2010

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Global security "toolkit" should be reconfigured - Russian diplomat

10:41 AM (MSK) February 8, 2010

A senior Russian diplomat who spoke on the sidelines of a security conference in Germany called on the international community on Sunday to find ways to enhance security.

"Very urgent issues of international security were discussed. It seems to me the main conclusion should be that the world is at a crossroads, and that the entire security toolkit should be fundamentally reconfigured," Deputy Russian Foreign Minister Alexander Grushko told RIA Novosti.

The 46th Munich Security Conference opened in the Bavarian capital on Friday. The three-day forum focuses on the future of European and global security.

Grushko said solutions to global problems should be sought jointly, with account for viewpoints of countries making up the international community.

"Our position is that NATO should build itself into a new system of relations taking into account other countries' legitimate security interests," he said.

The diplomat warned NATO against trying to play a key role in energy security, climate change and other spheres as, he said, this was fraught with the appearance of "new dividing lines."

http://en.rian.ru/russia/20100207/157800904.html


12:16 PM (MSD) July 30, 2010

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the publication of U.S. secret documents on the war in Afghanistan may lead to serious consequences for NATO troops and their Afghan assets.


12:10 PM (MSD) July 30, 2010

The ratification of a new strategic arms reduction (START) treaty with Russia is a top priority of the Barack Obama’s administration, a senior State Department official said.


01:47 PM (MSD) July 29, 2010

U.S. complaints about Russian compliance with the 1991 START nuclear arms control treaty had not been resolved when the pact expired last year, but the disputes never amounted to allegations of cheating, a senior administration official said Wednesday.

Rose Gottemoeller, chief U.S. negotiator of the newly completed follow-on START treaty, said in an interview that the most significant compliance issues were settled before negotiations began.


10:17 AM (MSD) July 29, 2010

US Ambassador to Russia John Beyrle was awarded in a ceremony on Wednesday the «65th WW2 Victory Anniversary Medal» for the major contribution to the preparation of the jubilee events, the RF Foreign Ministry reported. According to the ministry, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov held a meeting with the American diplomat on Wednesday.


10:10 AM (MSD) July 29, 2010

Russia’s population in 2009 made about 142 million. By 2925, it is expected to go down to 133 million, by 2050 — to 117 million, the US Population Reference Bureau said in its report, which was presented on Wednesday.


09:32 AM (MSD) July 29, 2010

The Russian government will allocate a total of 3.99 billion rubles ($132 million) in 2010 for the development of the Skolkovo research hub outside Moscow.

A relevant order was signed on July 26.


01:24 PM (MSD) July 27, 2010

Russia and the United States have basically coordinated an inter-country adoption agreement, the Education and Science Ministry said on Friday.


10:39 AM (MSD) July 27, 2010

The United States and Canada will conduct a joint Arctic mission this summer to prove their right for the extended continental shelf and Arctic seafloor, the U.S. Department of State has said.


10:34 AM (MSD) July 27, 2010

BP boss Tony Hayward may be put forward for a non-executive the board of directors of the company’s Russian venture, TNK-BP, after stepping down from the top job, Sky News said on Monday.


02:08 PM (MSD) July 26, 2010

A former Central Intelligence Agency director on Sunday said that bombing Iran’s nuclear facilities «might not be the worst» option for the U.S., as the country continues to push ahead with its nuclear programs despite heavy international sanctions.

Denis Corboy, William Courtney, Kenneth Yalowitz

The Black Sea is a cradle of civilization, trade and cultures, but today it is also a region of unresolved conflicts, porous borders and rivalries.

Terrorism and insurgency are spreading across the North Caucasus, abetted by fighters from the Middle East and South Asia. Everything from narcotics from Afghanistan to supplies for Iran’s nuclear program are smuggled through the region. Georgia remains tense since the 2008 war with Russia; separatists threaten hostilities in the regions of Nagorno-Karabakh and Trans-Dniestr.

Contributing to the insecurity is an absence of effective institutions for Black Sea regional cooperation.

Dmitry Kosyrev

The most interesting aspect of the news that there are CIA agents in the Afghan government is how quickly the story died in the media, when by all rights it should have prompted a month-long scandal.

Needless to say, Washington doesn’t care much about Afghanistan these days. Over the weekend, American conservatives staged quite a demonstration against President Barack Obama in the center of Washington, while Obama was busy preparing a powerful speech on the principles of U.S. foreign policy and the end of the U.S. occupation of Iraq, or at least the withdrawal of U.S. troops. In November, Obama and his Democratic Party are going to lose the midterm elections, and Obama’s hands will be tied by a much more hostile Congress. This is enough news to bury the story about the CIA for good.

Mario Margiocco

Italians and other Europeans have serious problems addressing their own national debts, public and private, so it may seem immodest for a European to discuss America’s growing and grave debt problem. But the fiscal realities on both sides of the Atlantic nowadays are very similar, and only lingering trust in the promise of America keeps alive the expectation among some Europeans that some grand American coup de théâtre will resolve the country’s dire debt situation.

Of course, many Americans recognize the scale of the country’s debt burden. Admiral Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and thus America’s highest ranking military officer, recently said, «The greatest danger to American security comes from the national debt.» Four Americans out of ten agree with him, whereas less than three in ten deem terrorism or Iran more dangerous.

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