Medvedev denounces US missile defence plans

RUSSIA: RUSSIA'S NEW president, Dmitry Medvedev, yesterday attacked the US's European missile defence plans, in the latest sign…

RUSSIA:RUSSIA'S NEW president, Dmitry Medvedev, yesterday attacked the US's European missile defence plans, in the latest sign that policy towards the West is unchanged since Vladimir Putin. Luke Hardingreports.

Mr Medvedev denounced the Bush administration's plans to build a missile defence shield in the Czech Republic and Poland, allegedly to shoot down a rogue missile fired by Iran. He accused the US of aggravating the situation and promised that Russia would respond appropriately.

"This common [security] heritage cannot survive if one of the sides selectively destroys isolated elements of the strategic construction," Mr Medvedev said, adding: "This doesn't satisfy us."

Addressing Russian ambassadors in Moscow, Mr Medvedev also dubbed Kosovo's US-backed independence illegal and accused the Baltic states of glorifying fascism. "They are shuffling history like a pack of cards," he said.

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Mr Medvedev's hard line in one of his first speeches on foreign policy since his May inauguration is likely to disappoint western observers. The comments follow Russia's veto last week of a UN Security Council resolution imposing sanctions and travel restrictions on Robert Mugabe.

Mr Medvedev is also embroiled in deepening confrontations with Georgia and the Czech Republic.

Last week the Czechs signed a deal with the US, agreeing to host the missile shield. On Monday, Russia's state-run oil pipeline, Transneft, confirmed it had halved oil deliveries to the Czech Republic - a move it claimed was commercial, not political.

With tensions rising over Georgia's breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Moscow last week admitted that four of its warplanes had entered Georgian airspace. Georgia's pro-US government has threatened to shoot down any more military aircraft that cross into its territory.

"There are no signals that Russia's foreign policy, as well as its domestic policy, has changed," Vladimir Ryzhkov, an opposition politician, said. "It's the same line. No new ideas. No new signal."

Russia's diplomatic war with Britain - which last week saw the Kremlin identify a senior diplomat in Moscow as a spy - also appeared to be continuing.

Russia's ambassador in Britain, Yuri Fedotov, yesterday said an unprecedented anti-Russian campaign by Britain had wrecked any new impetus between London and Moscow after last week's meeting between Mr Medvedev and British prime minister Gordon Brown. - (Guardian service)