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-News for Tue. 9 April & Wed. 10
April 2002 Germany Endorses Putin's Plan for New NATO
Mechanism
Jonathan Braude Berlin 10
Apr 2002 20:18 UTC

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| Vladimir Putin, left, and Gerhard Schroeder |
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German
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder Wednesday backed Russia's request for a role in
NATO decision-making. The call came direct from Russian President Vladimir
Putin.
Speaking after
talks with the German chancellor in Weimar, President Putin said he proposed
setting up a new forum alongside NATO and the existing consultation committee
where Russia would have an equal say in decisions with the Western
alliance.
He told a joint
press conference that the establishment of such a committee would improve
Russia's relationship with the 19 NATO nations.
At present, Mr.
Putin said there is a process in which the NATO countries formulate a policy
among themselves and then present it to the Russians for discussion in a joint
meeting. What Russia is proposing is to establish a new body in which all 20
nations discuss and decide together important questions of common and
international interest.
President Putin said
the new body would make decisions based on an equal status for its members and
Russia would have an equal voice.
He said he
would not expect he would have a veto over fundamental decisions regarding
co-operation between NATO nations. He would not, for instance, demand the right
to take part in questions regarding Article five of the Nato Treaty, that is
the clause which says that an attack on one member is an attack on them
all.
But the Russian
president said he would want a say in matters regarding the fight against
terrorism, the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons and weapons of
mass-destruction.
He would also want to
discuss humanitarian actions and perhaps other matters that he said, events
have shown, cannot be solved without Russian participation.
The statement which
fleshed out a request Mr. Putin made in a speech to the German parliament last
year, brought an immediate and cautiously positive response from Chancellor
Schroeder.
Mr. Putin's
wish for a qualitative improvement in relations, he said, was understandable
and appropriate. Mr. Schroeder said he was sure that NATO nation's reactions
will be generally positive and he felt sure that the discussions on further
enlargement of NATO will also be influenced in a positive way.
Mr. Schroeder
was careful, however, to say nothing about how NATO would accept the details of
the Russian plan.
A spokesman at the
U.S. Embassy in Berlin reacted with surprise, and said he was unable to comment
at this stage.
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