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Czechs don't expect US to scrap missile shield plans

Prague bans protest during Obama visit
City officials on Thursday banned a protest in Prague, coinciding with a visit Sunday by US President Barack Obama, against the deployment of a key part of a planned US missile shield on Czech soil. But an organiser for the march insisted it would go ahead. In a statement, officials in the Czech capital said the demonstration was liable to disrupt private and public transport and hamper security measures. The protest had been set to get underway Sunday at 3:00 pm (1300 GMT) in Place Venceslas, in the heart of Prague, proceeding to the convention centre where Obama is to meet European Union counterparts for an EU-US summit.

Jan Majicek, a spokesman for the No to Bases protest group, told AFP that the march would go ahead. "If there are clashes, city hall will be responsible," he said. Under an agreement signed last year by Prague and Washington, the Czech Republic is to host a radar unit as part of the controversial US missile defence system, with an anti-missile silo to be positioned in Poland. US officials says the system is needed to counter the risk of a missile attack notably from Iran, but Russia is fiercely opposed to the initiative. Opinion polls suggest that 70 percent of Czechs oppose the system.

by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) April 2, 2009
Czech Deputy Premier Alexandr Vondra said Thursday he is not expecting the US to scrap its missile shield plans in Europe, despite President Barack Obama's decision to review the scheme which Moscow opposes.

"I don't expect it will be scrapped," Vondra said in an interview with AFP, adding that "It's up to the Americans to say what their ideas are."

Prague and Washington last year signed two deals for the installment of a missile radar southwest of Prague as part of the controversial US missile shield scheme.

Former president George W. Bush launched the plans to extend the US missile shield into Europe, basing 10 interceptors in Poland linked to a radar in the Czech Republic to counter any threat from "rogue states," primarily Iran.

But Obama's administration has begun a review of the project's costs and technical feasibility, a move which has eased fears in Russia that the shield was aimed at it.

"It's logical that a new administration coming to power wants to make a review of all important things and that's an important thing. I expect the first results of this review to be presented some time later this year," said Vondra.

However while not expecting the project to be scrapped, the Czech deputy prime minister did admit there could be delays and modifications.

"There is the question about the speed, there is the question about some adjustments," he said.

One reason not to rush could be "the question of the maturity of the threats" from Iran, but it does not mean that we're going to scrap."

Officially, Russian diplomats have downplayed US and Israeli fears that Iran is on the verge of building an atomic weapon, while Moscow has resisted calls for tougher sanctions on Tehran for its disputed nuclear programme.

However a Russian strategic arms expert said earlier this month that Iran could produce an atomic weapon in "one or two years".

Obama's administration has already made some rapprochement towards Tehran.

The US held its first direct contact with Iran Tuesday at a conference on Afghanistan where America and its old foe found common cause on rebuilding the war-torn state.

The Czech government, which holds the rotating EU presidency, will host Obama at an EU-US summit in Prague on Sunday.

There it will hope to persuade him of the shield's usefulness despite public opposition to the project.

"There are some threats, so we should work together to see how to guarantee the protection of all allies if the threats persist," Vondra said.

"Iran certainly, if you measure this by its nuclear programme as well as the ballistic missile programme, belongs to the most serious threats."

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Outside View: Boost phase BMD -- Part 5
Arlington, Va. (UPI) Feb 2, 2009
In 1998 a U.S. presidential commission warned that the nuclear threat from "rogue states" such as North Korea was growing rapidly. In response, the Clinton administration proposed a $60 billion plan to build radars and interceptor missiles that could defend all 50 states against a limited nuclear attack.







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