Obama, Medvedev Say 'Reset' US-Russia Relations

June 24, 2010 RSS Feed Print
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WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama declared Thursday that he and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev have "succeeded in resetting" the relationship between the former Cold War adversaries that had dipped to a dangerous low in recent years.

Obama directly acknowledged differences in some areas, such as Moscow's tensions with neighboring Georgia, but said "we addressed those differences candidly." And he announced that the U.S. and Russia had agreed to expand cooperation on intelligence and the counterterror fight and worked on strengthening economic ties between the nations.

Obama gave Russia perhaps the biggest gift it could have wanted from the meetings: an unqualified, hearty plug for Moscow's ascension to the World Trade Organization. Russia has long wanted membership but U.S. support in the past has come with conditions.

"Russia belongs in the WTO," Obama said as the two leaders stood side-by-side in the East Room after several hours of meetings — including an impromptu trip to a nearby burger joint for lunch.

The leaders faced questions about the U.S.-led Afghanistan war, and Obama promised that the U.S. will "not miss a beat" because of the change in military command that he ordered on Wednesday. Obama accepted Gen. Stanley McChrystal's resignation and replaced him with his direct boss, Gen. David Petraeus.

Petraeus "understands the strategy because he helped shape it," Obama said.

Medvedev seemed reluctant to wade into the topic, recalling the ultimately disastrous Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979.

"I try not to give pieces of advice that cannot be fulfilled," Medvedev said. "This is a very hard topic, a very difficult one."

Yet he said that Russia supports the U.S. effort if it can result in Afghanistan emerging from extreme poverty and dysfunction to have "an effective state and a modern economy."

"This is the path to guarantee that the gravest scenarios of the last time will not repeat," he said.

Obama said the two had also agreed to coordinate on humanitarian aid for Kyrgyzstan, wracked by deadly unrest in the wake of the president's ouster there. Kyrgyzstan's president was driven from power in April amid corruption allegations, sparking violence that has left about 2,000 people dead and 400,000 ethnic Uzbeks homeless.

Asked about a major flashpoint between the U.S. and China, Obama said Washington would judge the effect of Beijing's latest currency announcement over the course of the year, rather than overnight. Obama and Medvedev go this weekend to Canada for the G-20 summit, with China's leader also attending. Obama faces pressure from Congress and the U.S. business community to press Beijing more aggressively on its currency policy.

The U.S. argues that the weak Chinese yuan hurts American exports. On Saturday, China announced it would loosen its controls on the currency, but the move may not strengthen the yuan enough for U.S. tastes.

The agenda for Obama and Medvedev was modest, and mostly focused beyond security issues to expanding trade and economic cooperation. Russia has the world's eighth-largest economy but ranks 25th among U.S. trading partners.

Obama said the two countries had reached an agreement to lift restrictions that have hindered U.S. poultry exports to Russia, removing a major irritant in trade relations. Russia, a major poultry importer, banned all chlorine-treated poultry imports starting Jan. 1, outlawing the 600,000 tons of poultry allowed from the U.S. under revised quotas. U.S. farmers accounted for 20 percent of the 3.5 million tons of poultry Russia consumed last year.

Obama said the agreement "sends an important signal about Russia's seriousness about achieving membership in the WTO."

"The true significance of Medvedev's visit is that it brings us closer to a relationship that doesn't require Cold War-style summits to sustain itself," says Sam Charap, a Russia analyst at the Center for American Progress. "The lack of headlines is actually a sign of progress."

Medvedev arrived at the White House on a sweltering summer morning for a series of meetings with Obama and U.S. officials. It was their seventh meeting since Obama took office 17 month ago.

Tags:
Stanley McChrystal,
Dmitry Medvedev,
Cold War,
David Petraeus,
War in Afghanistan (2001-),
Associated Press,
Barack Obama

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Page 1414 quoted the pope in l931. He said "Private Property was created by God Himself. Farther back, in l913, Boston, ll00 delegates met in a 4 day session of The Great American Catholic Missionary Congresses. The official record quotes a priest who asked "What is the purpose of this group? It is to make this nation Catholic and to make this hemisphere Catholic." He was applauded. Another man got the same reception when he said there were Catholics close to the new President of China and that nation was "white for the harvest." (Imagine getting tithes from that vast population if it were converted.) Later, Catholic Clare Luce led the China Lobby. It still attacks everyone who tries to normalize relations with the People's Republic of China. Later, Reagan & the pope were on Life's cover, bragging they destroyed the USSR in l989. It split up. The parts were immediately taken over by the Russian Mafia. Its members bought for almost nothing all the assets developed by the socialist non-profit system. In the separated states, the Catholic Church is once again being subsidized by taxes.

aura dawn veirs of CA 9:17PM June 26, 2010

Who would imagine the Vatican is responsible for the Cold War, when the pope's always "praying for peace?" Look on Pg. 1414, Vol 4, of an edition of the Catholic Reference Encyclopedia, for its definition of "Private Property." It says "The Church vigorously opposes those systems that seek to replace private with public property." The Church by 1966 was the world's largest single stockholders deeply committed to capitalism. Nobody can deny that the USA has acted as surrogate for the Vatican as we sent our taxes & soldiers to "vigorously oppose" governments that put natural resources into public ownership. They included the PRC, N. Korea, N. Vietnam, Allende's Chile, the Sandinistas in Nicaragua, Cuba, etc. The latest victim was Iraq, where the socialist Baath Party nationalized oil. That act prevented foreign investors from turning oil into private property. Reagan was a fake WASP. His dad, brother & first wife were Catholics. Many of his supporters & appointees were papal subjects, including Red-Basher Jeanne Kirkpatrick busy at the UN in attacks on the USSR. Please see next screen.

Aura dawn veirs of CA 8:51PM June 26, 2010

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