MOSCOW, Nov. 13 (Xinhua) -- Russia could abandon its
plans to deploy short-range missiles in the Baltic enclave of Kaliningrad if the
new U.S. administration changes its missile defense plans, says President Dmitry
Medvedev.
In his first state-of-the-nation address last week,
Medvedev said Russia would deploy a short-range missile system in the
Kaliningrad region bordering Poland and Lithuania, in response to U.S. plans to
set up a missile shield in Central Europe.
"I think that this is a completely appropriate
response. It is not we who began all of this," Medvedev said in an interview
with the French daily Le Figaro published Thursday.
However, "we could reconsider this response if the
new U.S. administration is ready to once again review and analyze all the
consequences of its decisions to deploy the missiles and radar facilities,"
Medvedev said.
The Russian president said signals so far from U.S.
President-elect Barack Obama's transition team indicate Washington's willingness
to consider a compromise on the issue.
"The first reaction we have seen from the incoming
U.S. administration gives us grounds for hope... We are ready for talks, and at
the same time we are also ready for the 'zero option'," he said.
"Moreover, we are ready to continue work on the idea
of a global defense system in which the United States, the European Union member
states, and the Russian Federation would all take part," he added.
In 2007, Washington proposed to establish an
anti-ballistic missile shield in Central Europe, consisting of interceptor
missiles in Poland and a radar station in the Czech Republic.
Moscow has consistently expressed opposition to the
missile shield, saying it threatens its national security. However, the United
States insists the shield is designed to thwart missile attacks by what it calls
"rogue states."
Washington said last Thursday it had offered Moscow
new proposals on nuclear arms reductions and missile defense, while Russia
indicated it will not address the proposals until Obama takes office in January.
The U.S. embassy in Moscow said Wednesday that Russia
and the United States had agreed to resume talks on strategic security and
missile defense in December.