PRAGUE, Jan. 3 (Xinhua) -- Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk will arrive in Prague to talk about the U.S. missile shield with his Czech counterpart Mirek Topolanek next Thursday, government spokeswoman Jana Bartosova said on Thursday.
Tusk and Topolanek will probably coordinate their stand on the radar and missile bases, the Czech news agency CTK said.
Both of them will discuss the issue with U.S. President George W. Bush. Topolanek is to meet him in Washington on Feb. 27, Bartosova confirmed. Tusk's visit is to take place about a month earlier, according to CTK.
The Czech Republic and Poland have been negotiating with the United States on the project since last year, but no definite decision has been made.
Tusk made it clear in December that his country will not consent to the U.S. base on its soil unless it gets "one hundred percent" guarantees that it will serve Poland's national security.
The United States initiated the plan to deploy an anti-missile radar base in the Czech Republic and a missile interceptor base in Poland last year. A recent opinion poll showed that most Czechs oppose the establishment of the base.
Other issues on the agenda of Polish and Czech leaders will be energy, the European Union and the situation in Russia and Ukraine.