Bush, Putin Mending Ties, Sign SORT
Wade Boese
En route to a June 1-3 Group of Eight summit in Evian, France,
President George W. Bush traveled to St. Petersburg to meet with
Russian President Vladimir Putin. The meeting marked the first encounter
between the two leaders since they split over how to disarm Iraq,
chilling the warming relationship both had strived to forge.
Bush and Putin were expected to exchange views on Iraq, Iran, North
Korea, and the war on terrorism. The UN Security Councils
May 22 vote to lift sanctions on Iraq diminished one potentially
nettlesome issue.
Bushs visit was to be crowned with an exchange of instruments
of ratification for the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty (SORT),
which the Russian Duma approved May 14, during a preparatory visit
by Secretary of State Colin Powell. The Federation Council, the
upper chamber of Russias parliament, passed the treaty May
28, clearing the way for the presidents to bring the treaty into
force. The U.S. Senate unanimously endorsed the ratification of
the agreement March 6. (See
ACT, April 2003.)
Missile defense has also emerged as a possible topic at the meeting.
Over the past several months, Russian officials and press reports
have indicated that Moscow would like some type of political agreement
or joint declaration on missile defense, and Russia said several
months ago that it had sent a draft text to Washington. In a May
14 interview, a State Department official said that Moscow appears
to want an umbrella agreement to permit U.S. and Russian companies
to work together on missile defense projects.
Russias interest in missile defense cooperation remains largely
confined to defenses against short- and medium-range ballistic missiles.
Moscow continues to express concern about the U.S. plan to build
a multilayered defense against long-range ballistic missiles and
strongly opposes the possibility of U.S. space-based defenses.
The United States has publicly disclosed plans to put three to
five armed satellites in space by as early as 2008 to test whether
such a defense is feasible. Russia has joined China in pressing
for a treaty to be negotiated at the UN Conference on Disarmament
barring any type of weapon from being placed in space.
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