Medical and Hospital News  
MISSILE DEFENSE
Medvedev to present missile defence vision at NATO: Kremlin

NATO missile shield must not be aimed at Iran: Turkey
Ankara (AFP) Nov 19, 2010 - A planned Europe-wide ballistic missile shield for NATO must not be aimed at Iran and there appears to be agreement on this point, Turkish President Abdullah Gul said Friday before leaving to attend the NATO summit in Lisbon. "We are categorically opposed to have a country named (as a threat) and our request appears to have been accepted," he told reporters before leaving Ankara. "Turkey cannot join a project that is aimed at a specific country," Gul said, stressing that NATO was a defensive alliance aimed at defending its members against any ballistic threat and is not an organization designed "to intimidate and threaten." "The project must cover all (NATO) members without exception... It will not be aimed at Iran, we said it," the Turkish president said, adding that Ankara hoped that its request will be endorsed by other NATO allies in Lisbon. Leaders of the 28-member NATO alliance gathered in Lisbon Friday and Saturday were to endorse plans to launch a new Europe-wide ballistic missile shield.

Diplomats said there had been intense debate in the run-up to the summit about whether Iran should be targetted as a specific menace in the public document they adopt. Turkey is mindful of its delicate position with neighbouring Iran, however, and has said it will refuse to sign up to a NATO document that names Iran as the threat in the final declaration. NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen told reporters on Monday that there was "no reason to name specific countries." "The fact is that more than 30 countries have, or are aspiring to get missile technologies with a range sufficient to hit targets in the Euro-Atlantic area," he said. NATO wants to link existing or future national missile defence systems to create an umbrella that would protect all of Europe's population and territory, at a cost of less than 200 million euros, officials say.
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Nov 19, 2010
President Dmitry Medvedev will lay out his vision for joint missile defence with the West when he addresses the weekend NATO summit, a top Kremlin official said in comments released Friday.

Despite a lukewarm response from Europe, Medvedev has pushed for a common European security strategy uniting the continent that was long split between the West and the Soviet bloc.

"During his address, President Medvedev will voice a number of ideas about how we shall build cooperation in the missile defense sphere in the coming years," said his top foreign policy aide Sergei Prikhodko.

"We believe that the Euro-Atlantic process has indeed been set in motion and we have a good opportunity to work to finally remove dividing lines, move towards a common indivisible security space," he told reporters in the Kremlin.

"Decisions will be taken in the next few years but the consequences will influence the nature of cooperation for decades to come."

At the summit, Russia would like NATO to put its declared willingness to cooperate with Russia on missile defence on paper, Prikhodko said.

"We would like the importance of joint participation in missile defence, which would ensure security, to be reflected in the documents in one way or another," he said.

Moscow, however, will not expect too much too early. "We are realists, we will not ask for the impossible."

US President Barack Obama, who will also attend the gathering, has shelved an initiative by his predecessor George W. Bush to place an anti-missile radar facility in the Czech Republic and interceptors in Poland, opting for what he says is more a flexible system.

Russia and NATO are also expected to agree on a number of documents, including on "reverse transit", which would allow NATO to ship non-lethal cargo from Afghanistan, and common threats, the Kremlin said.

The NATO-Russia summit will mark the highest-level meeting between the two sides since the war between Russia and the pro-Western former Soviet state of Georgia in August 2008 severely strained relations.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Learn about missile defense at SpaceWar.com
Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com
All about missiles at SpaceWar.com
Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


MISSILE DEFENSE
NATO leaders to avoid citing Iran as missile threat
Lisbon (AFP) Nov 18, 2010
NATO leaders will launch a new Europe-wide ballistic missile shield at a Lisbon summit but will not openly identify Iran as a threat so as to win over Turkey, officials said Thursday. US President Barack Obama and supporters of the shield want to wrap up broad agreement at the Friday-Saturday summit on a missile umbrella stretching across European members of the 28-nation alliance. Turke ... read more







MISSILE DEFENSE
New Sensor Allows On-Site, Faster Testing For Scour Assessment

China says over 81 million disaster-hit people need aid

Italy ill-prepared for natural disasters: experts

Minneapolis Disaster Spawning New Concepts In Bridge Research, Testing And Safety

MISSILE DEFENSE
Russia To Launch New Generation Satellite In 2013

SkyTraq Introduces New GLONASS/GPS Receiver

SES To Contribute To Galileo Operations

GPS IIF-1 Introduces A Host Of New Capabilities For Users

MISSILE DEFENSE
Human Children Outpaced Neanderthals By Slowing Down

Paraguay nixes British expedition to remote tribal region

Origin Of Cells Associated With Nerve Repair Discovered

The Brains Of Neanderthals And Modern Humans Developed Differently

MISSILE DEFENSE
Mortal Chemical Combat Typifies The World Of Bacteria

Vein Networks Control Plant Patterns

A Dead End For Plant Cells

Microsensors Offer First Look At Whether Cell Mass Affects Growth Rate

MISSILE DEFENSE
'Unpredictable' cholera to afflict Haiti for years: US

Hong Kong confirms first human case of bird flu since 2003

Anti-UN unrest spreads to Haiti capital

WHO says flu risk assessment unchanged after Hong Kong case

MISSILE DEFENSE
Six countries turn down Nobel ceremony invite: Institute

China law enforcers ordered to make no-beating vow: report

No one to come pick up Nobel Peace Prize: Nobel Institute

Brother of jailed China Nobel winner calls for his release

MISSILE DEFENSE
Pirates seize ship with 29 Chinese sailors aboard: Xinhua

Nigerian military warns armed gangs in oil-rich Niger Delta

Three pirates shot dead attacking Kenyan navy

China says ship, crew hijacked off Somalia in June rescued

MISSILE DEFENSE
Chinese, Indian growth easing, weak yuan a danger: OECD

China vows to contain soaring prices as public fears mount

China central banker concerned about inflation, hot money

Ireland defiant on EU bailout pressure


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement