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NATO and Russia on 'solid path': alliance chief

Two Russians detained on suspicion of spying for China
Saint Petersburg (AFP) Sept 22, 2010 - Two Russian scientists are being held in a high-security Moscow prison while being investigated on suspicion of spying for China, a lawyer for one of the scientists said Wednesday. The two men, Svyatoslav Bobyshev and Yevgeny Afanasyev, who are both university academics, are being held in Lefortovo jail while being investigated for "high treason and espionage", Bobyshev's lawyer Dmitry Agranovsky told AFP. Lefortovo was used by the KGB in Soviet times and by its successor FSB, or the Federal Security Service, since 1995. On Wednesday, Bobyshev's defence lost an appeal against his pre-trial detention, the Interfax news agency reported, citing the Moscow City Court.

The two men teach at Voenmekh University in Saint Petersburg, an engineering school with a military slant, working in a department that specialised in technical equipment for rockets and space vehicles. They also lectured at China's Harbin Technical University as part of an exchange programme. Bobyshev's daughter said Wednesday that the claims were absurd. "My father read lectures whose entire content was checked a thousand times. All of his colleagues are shocked," Bobyshev's daughter Yekaterina told AFP. "I am sure this case is part of FSB's spy mania," she said. Voenmekh University refused to comment on the case on Wednesday. The charge of high treason could lead to a jail sentence of up to 20 years.

The detentions come after a number of scientists and academics have been jailed on grounds of espionage in recent years. Arms expert Igor Sutyagin was convicted in 2004 of handing over classified information to a British company that Russia claimed was a CIA cover, and sentenced to 15 years in jail, although he denied his guilt. He was freed as part of a high-profile spy swap earlier this year, when 10 Russian agents were flown back from the United States after their embarrassing exposure. The 10 Kremlin agents had been arrested in an FBI swoop that initially threatened to derail a warming in Russia-US relations championed by President Dmitry Medvedev. Many ex-KGB spies have gone on the record slamming the shoddy and apparently antiquated spycraft of the 10, who were working for the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR), a successor of the Soviet KGB. One of the deported spies, the glamorous Anna Chapman, last month sparked a new scandal after appearing in a racy photo shoot published by tabloids.
by Staff Writers
New York (AFP) Sept 22, 2010
NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Wednesday the alliance was on a "solid path" to improving ties with Russia, as the United States declared Moscow a partner and not an adversary.

In their latest attempt to repair the rift in post-Cold War relations following Moscow's 2008 war in Georgia, foreign ministers held a meeting of the NATO-Russia Council on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York.

"I feel that we truly are on a solid path now to improve NATO-Russia relations," Secretary General Rasmussen told reporters after the meeting.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton meanwhile made clear the United States did not believe NATO and Russia were adversaries -- and called on Moscow to eventually join the alliance in a combined missile defense "architecture."

"NATO and Russia have an important partnership -- one that we should strengthen and deepen to advance our shared interests and solve shared challenges," she said at the talks.

Clinton has played a key role in the Obama administration's effort to "reset" relations with Russia, a strategy the White House says has yielded important cooperation on issues including Iran's nuclear program.

The meeting went ahead at the plush Waldorf Astoria hotel as the alliance waits for Russia to respond to an invitation to hold a full-scale leaders summit in Lisbon on November 20.

"We did have a useful discussion on what the substance (of the summit) might be, and we discussed concrete substance," Rasmussen said.

The Lisbon meeting would take place after NATO leaders hold their own summit in the Portuguese capital November 19-20.

NATO and Russia are cooperating on countering narcotics and terrorism emanating from Afghanistan, and on other national security threats, but are divided over US missile defense plans and the alliance's eastward expansion.

NATO's dominant member, the United States, marked the meeting with a call to revive a Cold War-era treaty setting limits on troops and weapons which Russia froze nearly three years ago.

Clinton said the two sides should agree to restore the viability of the conventional arms control regime in Europe this year, and move on to modernize the Conventional Forces in Europe treaty (CFE) next year.

Moscow suspended compliance to the CFE in December 2007, then asked Western governments to accept amendments to the 1999 treaty.

But NATO nations refused to ratify the amended pact, which took into account geopolitical changes wrought by the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, until Russian troops withdraw from ex-Soviet republics Georgia and Moldova.

In a political boost to Washington, Russia announced just before the New York encounter that it had dropped plans to supply Iran with S-300 air defense missiles because they are subject to international sanctions.

US National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer said the United States strongly welcomed President Dmitry Medvedev's "leadership" on holding Iran "accountable" to its obligations.

Russia agreed the missile deal several years ago but has never delivered the weapons amid pressure from the United States and Israel, which fear they would dramatically improve Iran's defensive capabilities.

But the two sides have identified common interests in the face of threats such as terrorism, nuclear proliferation and drug trafficking as they gingerly revive ties that had sunk to a new low following the war in Georgia.

On Afghanistan, Russia meanwhile cooperates in the fight against drug smuggling and allows the transit of supplies, except weapons, for NATO troops through its territory.

Plans under the previous US administration for the US missile shield to be extended into eastern Europe, notably with installations in Poland and the Czech Republic, drew strong protests from Moscow.

But President Barack Obama last year scrapped the plan for sea- and land-based missile interceptors and sensors based partly on a reassessment of the threat from Iran.



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NATO, Russia to take stock of ties at New York meeting
Brussels (AFP) Sept 21, 2010
NATO and Russia will take stock of their warming ties when foreign ministers meet in New York on Wednesday with missile defence, mutual threats and Afghanistan tipped to be on the agenda. The meeting of the NATO-Russia Council on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly comes as the 28-nation Atlantic alliance waits for Russia to respond to an invitation to a summit in Lisbon on November 20. ... read more







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