MOSCOW — NATO still hopes to engage Russia in its prospective missile-defense system, but won’t yield to Moscow’s push for the shield to be run jointly, an alliance envoy said Tuesday.
James Appathurai, deputy assistant NATO secretary-general, said the alliance would like to reach a missile-defense deal with Moscow by NATO’s summit in Chicago in May, but added that he wouldn’t “gamble on expectations.”
“We are always, of course, optimistic at NATO,” Mr. Appathurai said at a news conference. “But we are also determined to keep the hand outstretched. I can’t predict, of course, when we would arrive at agreement.”
Russia says the U.S.-led missile-defense plan could threaten its nuclear forces, undermining their deterrence potential. It has agreed to consider NATO’s proposal last fall to cooperate on the missile shield.
But the talks have been deadlocked over how the system should be operated. Russia has insisted that the system should be run jointly, which NATO has rejected.
Mr. Appathurai insisted that the alliance’s 28 members share a treaty obligation to provide security for each other and can’t outsource that.
“We can’t do that with any other partner no matter how trusted,” he said, adding that NATO is offering Russia an “unprecedented level of transparency and cooperation.”
Mr. Appathurai argued that the alliance has proposed to engage Russia by sharing data and coordinating a response. He also mentioned a U.S. proposal for Moscow to have a close look at the shield’s technical capabilities and see that it won’t threaten its security.
The NATO proposals have failed to impress the Kremlin, which has continued to push for legal guarantees that the future system wouldn’t threaten Russia.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has warned that the failure to reach agreement on missile defense may prompt Russia to deploy new offensive weapons, triggering an arms race.
Relations between NATO and Russia have been a roller coaster over the past decade, reaching a high point after the September 2001 terrorist attacks and then plummeting to post-Cold War low after the 2008 Russian-Georgian war when the alliance froze relations with Moscow.
Despite the missile-defense dispute, Mr. Appathurai argued that current relations between NATO and Russia are “broader and deeper than they have ever been,” pointing to Russia providing a vital overland supply link for NATO forces in Afghanistan.
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