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Edited on Fri Oct-10-03 01:04 AM by WheresWaldo
NATO to Quiz Ivanov Over Army Warning {sorry no link, article from Eurasia-Geopolitics listserv}
By Paul Ames The Associated Press COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado -- Provoked NATO officials want an explanation from Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov of Russia's threat to rethink its nuclear strategy because of the Western alliance's "offensive military doctrine."
Thursday's final day of talks by NATO defense ministers in this Rocky Mountain city also was to review plans to expand the alliance's peacekeeping mission in Afghanistan and consider a European Union offer to take over peacekeeping in Bosnia.
Ivanov was to join his NATO counterparts a week after the document released by his ministry cast a shadow over much-improved relations between Russia and its Cold War rival.
Released before a Moscow meeting among Ivanov, President Vladimir Putin and senior military officers, the document noted that NATO had failed to remove "anti-Russian components" from its military plans and political statements.
"If NATO is preserved as a military alliance with its existing offensive military doctrine, this will demand a radical reconstruction of Russian military planning ... including changes in Russian nuclear strategy," the Defense Ministry said. <snip>
EDITED TO ADD BELOW TEXT:
Thursday, Oct. 9, 2003. Page 9 The Moscow Times Ivanov's Defense Manifesto
By Pavel Felgenhauer
<snip> The document is legally not a "doctrine" at all. The Constitution states that an official military doctrine has to be signed into law by the president. Russia has such a doctrine, signed by Putin in 2000, and it has not been overruled.
Sergei Karaganov, president of the Council on Foreign and Defense Policy said that Ivanov's text "is not a doctrine, but a collection of ideas from the Defense Ministry on this and that -- a mix of rhetoric, of new ideas and old ones."
So what was all the show really for? Ivanov indicated that Russia might use nuclear weapons to "preventively" attack its neighbors "to stop acts of aggression." This aggressive rhetoric alarmed diplomats from small neutral nations, but a high-ranking U.S. diplomat dismissed Ivanov's "doctrine" as a "PR document for internal use during Putin's presidential re-election campaign." <snip>
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