Alekasandar3
Buduća legenda
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Ради се о пакет-предлогу САД Русији у вези антиракетног штита.
Дефекто се ради о понуди САД Русији да у замену з аизвесне уступке пристане на план антиракетног штита.
По прву пут Америка помиње Косово и статус конвенционалних снага у Европи са Антиракетним штитом!
Да лису то американци продали шиптаре зарад Руске сагласности око штита!?
"I consider the U.S. proposal on missile defense as very important," Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, the NATO secretary general, said in an interview. "The Americans have made a substantial and fundamental offer. I sincerely hope the Russians will pick it up."
The plan, presented to NATO by Daniel Fried, the assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs, and Lieutenant General Henry Obering, head of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency, contained several elements that diplomats said were part of a bigger package that would include the future status of Kosovo and the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty, an accord Russia has threatened to leave next month.
The linkage of the shield debate to other issues represents a big change by the Bush administration which, until now, has had a splintered policy toward Russia over Iran, Kosovo and arms negotiations.
It involves the future status of the Serbian province of Kosovo as well as Russia's threat to suspend the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty, which has been a cornerstone of European security since the end of the Cold War.
The special "troika" on Kosovo, which consists of the United States, the European Union and Russia, will deliver its final report on Dec. 10 on the outcome of negotiations between Serbia and Kosovo over the province's status. Diplomats from the troika were at NATO headquarters this week to brief ambassadors on options in order to break the deadlock on possible independence for Kosovo.
The Europeans are very reluctant to recognize Kosovo's independence without UN backing. But most EU member states, frustrated by the lack of progress in negotiations between Serbia and Kosovo, may recognize independence if there is no breakthrough.
Russia insists that independence without consensus from the UN security council would be a dangerous precedent for other regions seeking independence.
A senior U.S. official said Friday "we are encouraged by the creativity" of the talks. "This is not a stalled process."
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/10/19/africa/nato.php
Дефекто се ради о понуди САД Русији да у замену з аизвесне уступке пристане на план антиракетног штита.
По прву пут Америка помиње Косово и статус конвенционалних снага у Европи са Антиракетним штитом!
Да лису то американци продали шиптаре зарад Руске сагласности око штита!?
"I consider the U.S. proposal on missile defense as very important," Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, the NATO secretary general, said in an interview. "The Americans have made a substantial and fundamental offer. I sincerely hope the Russians will pick it up."
The plan, presented to NATO by Daniel Fried, the assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs, and Lieutenant General Henry Obering, head of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency, contained several elements that diplomats said were part of a bigger package that would include the future status of Kosovo and the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty, an accord Russia has threatened to leave next month.
The linkage of the shield debate to other issues represents a big change by the Bush administration which, until now, has had a splintered policy toward Russia over Iran, Kosovo and arms negotiations.
It involves the future status of the Serbian province of Kosovo as well as Russia's threat to suspend the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty, which has been a cornerstone of European security since the end of the Cold War.
The special "troika" on Kosovo, which consists of the United States, the European Union and Russia, will deliver its final report on Dec. 10 on the outcome of negotiations between Serbia and Kosovo over the province's status. Diplomats from the troika were at NATO headquarters this week to brief ambassadors on options in order to break the deadlock on possible independence for Kosovo.
The Europeans are very reluctant to recognize Kosovo's independence without UN backing. But most EU member states, frustrated by the lack of progress in negotiations between Serbia and Kosovo, may recognize independence if there is no breakthrough.
Russia insists that independence without consensus from the UN security council would be a dangerous precedent for other regions seeking independence.
A senior U.S. official said Friday "we are encouraged by the creativity" of the talks. "This is not a stalled process."
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/10/19/africa/nato.php