Can't find what you're looking for? Try Google Search.
Google
Showing posts with label russia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label russia. Show all posts

Russia, U.S. sign civilian nuclear pact

Russia and the United States signed a pact on Tuesday allowing the world's two biggest atomic powers to boost their nuclear trade and work on new ways to prevent the proliferation of nuclear weapons.

File photo of U.S. President George W. Bush (L) and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Sochi April 5, 2008. Russia and the U.S. signed on Tuesday a long awaited civilian nuclear cooperation pact that will allow firms from the world's two biggest atomic powers to expand bilateral nuclear trade. (REUTERS/RIA Novosti/Kremlin/Files)

The civilian deal will open up the booming U.S. nuclear market and Russia's vast uranium fields to firms from both countries by removing Cold War restrictions that prevented bilateral trade potentially worth billions of dollars.

U.S. ambassador to Russia, William Burns, signed the deal with the head of Russia's state nuclear corporation, Sergei Kiriyenko, on the last full day of Vladimir Putin's presidency.

"The United States and Russia were once nuclear rivals -- we are today nuclear partners," said Burns.

At the 2006 Group of Eight summit in St Petersburg, President George W. Bush and Putin ordered ministers to reach a deal but it has faced opposition from some U.S. congressmen because of Russia's nuclear cooperation with Iran.

A 123 agreement, so-called because it falls under section 123 of the U.S. Atomic Energy Act, is required before countries can cooperate on nuclear materials.

It is critical to the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership, or GNEP, which the United States and Russia have discussed for more than a year as a way to expand peaceful nuclear energy development and mitigate proliferation risks.

"What this agreement allows us to do is to implement some very creative ideas that both Russia and the United States have put forward to deal with the growing challenge of proliferation of nuclear weapons," Burns said.

He said the deal would allow Washington and Moscow to move forward on proposals for international nuclear fuel centres, which would sell developing countries access to nuclear energy but remove the need for their own enrichment programmes.

NUCLEAR GIANTS

Russia and the United States control the largest arsenals of nuclear weapons in the world and both have ambitious plans to build hundreds of new reactors for power production.

Some U.S. politicians have said nuclear cooperation with Russia should be shunned because Moscow is helping Iran build an atomic power station, but the Bush administration is keen to have the pact approved this year.

State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said in Washington that now that the deal has been signed, it would be sent to Congress for lawmakers to review "in due course".

When asked about speculation that Bush may not submit the deal to Congress -- possibly leaving it for the next president to do -- McCormack said: "Usually we don't sign agreements we don't intend to send to Congress for ratification."

Once the agreement is sent to lawmakers, it would go into force if Congress did not pass a disapproval resolution within 90 legislative days. Russia's parliament, controlled by Putin's party, must also ratify the treaty.

Russia, one of the world's biggest sellers of enrichment services, has been trying to break into the nuclear markets of the United States and European Union.

"The signing of this agreement opens a gigantic field of opportunities for the economic cooperation in the large and growing businesses linked to the civilian use of nuclear energy," Kiriyenko said after the signing.

Tuesday's agreement simplifies life for companies in both countries and allows them to strike deals on trade in nuclear materials directly among themselves.

Putin has reformed Russia's nuclear sector to boost competition and open it up to atomic firms such as Japan's Toshiba Corp, which owns U.S.-based Westinghouse Electric.

Russia has crafted a nuclear behemoth called Atomenergoprom -- which officials say is an atomic version of Russian gas giant Gazprom -- to compete with the biggest nuclear companies on the world market.

Read More News Dedicated...

Russia warns of Kosovo repercussions

MOSCOW - Russia said on Friday international recognition of Kosovo would influence its policy towards the Georgian breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, but it did not say if it would recognise them.
A Kosovo Albanian woman is seen behind an Albanian national flag in Kosovo, February 15, 2008. Russia said on Friday international recognition of Kosovo would influence its policy towards the Georgian breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, but it did not say if it would recognise them. (REUTERS/Hazir Reka)

Kosovo is expected to unilaterally declare independence from Serbia on Sunday and then be recognised by the United States and most members of the European Union. Russia backs its ally Serbia in opposing the move.

Russian officials have linked Kosovo's status to Georgia's separatist regions, saying any recognition of the Serbian province as an independent state would create a legal precedent that would be followed by others.

"We will, without doubt, have to take into account a declaration and recognition of Kosovo independence in connection with the situation in Abkhazia and South Ossetia," Russia's foreign ministry said in a statement.

The statement, posted on the ministry's Internet site www.mid.ru, made no mention of whether Russia would grant recognition to the two regions.

Earlier, Interfax news agency quoted the foreign ministry as saying Russia would change its policy on the breakaway regions if Kosovo was recognised. It later amended its report, removing the reference to a change in policy.

The statement on the Internet site said Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had talks on Friday with Abkhazia's separatist leader Sergei Bagapsh and Eduard Kokoity, president of South Ossetia's separatist administration.

Abkhazia and South Ossetia broke away from ex-Soviet Georgia in fighting in the 1990s. Some observers have said Russia might grant them recognition in response to Western states recognising Kosovo.

Russia already provides financial aid to both regions and the majority of residents hold Russian passports. Moscow has peacekeeping troops in Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

Russia has stopped short of granting the regions recognition because, analysts say, it fears that could encourage its own separatists.

President Vladimir Putin on Thursday described recognition for Kosovo as "immoral and illegal" and said he had a plan on how to respond if Western states back Kosovo's independence.

He did not disclose any details of the plan but he said Russia would not "ape" the Western recognition of Kosovo, a signal that Russia's response would not involve Moscow recognising Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

Read More News Dedicated...

Iran starts second atomic power plant - Tass

MOSCOW- Iran has started building a second atomic power plant in an oil-rich region near the border with Iraq, Iran's Ambassador to Russia was quoted as saying on Friday by Itar-Tass news agency.

Gholamreza Ansari said construction had started at Darkhovin in south-western Khuzestan province. Iran has said it would construct a 360 megawatt plant at the site.

"Now we need to think about the fuel for it," Tass quoted him as saying at a news briefing in Moscow. A spokesman for the Iranian embassy confirmed the comment.

Iran has been building its first nuclear power plant near the southern city of Bushehr, where Tehran says test operations could start later this year. Final deliveries of nuclear fuel by Russia arrived at the plant last month.

Western countries suspect Iran's nuclear activities are aimed at weapon-building. Iran, the world's fourth largest crude oil producer, says it wants only to generate electricity so that it can export more oil and gas.

Iran wants to build other power plants by 2020 as part of a planned network with a capacity of 20,000 megawatt to satisfy soaring domestic electricity demand.

The International Atomic Energy Agency has mentioned the Darkhovin project in previous reports on Iran.

But Iran curbed access by the watchdog's inspectors to planned nuclear sites last year, and stopped providing design data on them, in retaliation for U.N. sanctions imposed on it.

A senior IAEA source declined to say whether those restrictions remained with respect to Darkhovin or other sites. The matter will be addressed in the next agency report on Iran due around Feb. 20.

The ambassador to Moscow said Iran had been trying to ease Russian concerns about its space programme after the test launch of a rocket this month.

Russia's Deputy Foreign Ministry Alexander Losyukov said this week the launch raised suspicions about the real nature of Iran's atomic programme.

"We are explaining to our friends that we are not pursuing any military goals as far as our space research is concerned," the ambassador was quoted as saying.

Read More News Dedicated...

Putin lashes out at West's "new arms race"

MOSCOW - President Vladimir Putin said on Friday a new global arms race was starting and Russia was "forced to retaliate" with new, high-tech weapons.
Russia's President Vladimir Putin speaks to the State Council in Moscow's Kremlin February 8, 2008. (REUTERS/Alexander Natruskin)

In a tough speech outlining his vision for Russia to 2020, Putin accused the West of ignoring Moscow's concerns on security by expanding the NATO military alliance to its borders and deploying a missile defence system in Central Europe.

"It is already clear that a new arms race is unfolding in the world. It's not our fault, we didn't start it," Putin told government, business and military leaders at the Kremlin, three months before his presidency is due to end.

"In effect, we are forced to retaliate...Russia has and always will have a response to these new challenges," he added.

Apparently referring to plans for new nuclear-capable missiles, Putin said "over the next few years Russia will start production of new types of weapons which...are in no way inferior to what other states have and in some cases are superior".

Putin also said there was a "fierce fight" for natural resources around the globe and many conflicts and foreign policy actions "smell of oil and gas". Moscow needed to be on its guard against attempts to get access to its resources, he added.

"Under the disguise of turgid declarations about freedom and open society, sometimes the sovereignty of certain states and whole regions is being destroyed," Putin said, in an apparent reference to U.S. policy in the Middle East and in particular the war in Iraq.

Speaking ahead of presidential elections next month which are widely expected to be won by his chosen successor Dmitry Medvedev, Putin attacked foreign countries for "immoral and illegal" attempts to interfere in Russia's domestic affairs.

The West's main election watchdog, the ODIHR, said on Thursday it was scrapping plans to monitor Russia's presidential election because of restrictions by Moscow on the number of observers and the amount of time they could work.

Western countries have criticised democracy in Russia, saying the Kremlin's dominance over the airwaves and its liberal use of government resources to help official candidates make it impossible for the opposition to compete fairly. Putin said democracy was a "cornerstone" of Russian society.

Although Putin's speech was billed in Russian media as a blueprint for Medvedev to follow, the president did not mention his successor by name in his 50 minutes of remarks or refer to the next government. There were few specific policy details.

Putin has said he intends to stay active in politics and will become prime minister under Medvedev.

But many analysts find improbable the scenario of an all-powerful, popular leader such as Putin voluntarily handing over the reins to a loyal subordinate and taking a lesser position himself.

Medvedev, sitting among cabinet members in the front row of seats in the Kremlin's St. George Hall, listened attentively as Putin hailed Russia's economic growth and stability during his eight years in power and called for fresh efforts to wean the economy off its dependence on exports of raw materials.

He hailed the new-found strength of the Russian economy, pointing to a boom in investment, state coffers which are now full and gross domestic product growth of over 8 percent a year.

But Putin also conceded that the economy was "still very ineffective" and criticised the lack of progress in turning Moscow's large scientific research programme into concrete technological advances.

Around 80 percent of Russia's exports are raw materials and imports are rising rapidly, threatening to tip the country's trade balance into the red within three years.

"Russia should become a world leader in technology," Putin said. "...the pace of development in innovation must be dramatically higher than it is today".

He proposed tax breaks for companies investing in employees' training and healthcare and said the government should help promote scientific research and innovation.

Russia faces a major demographic crisis, with its population falling because of low birthrates and limited life expectancy. Putin said this had to change.

"Today, every other man in Russia does not have the chance to live to be 60 years old. That is shameful...we must do everything to cut the mortality level in Russia", he said.

Read More News Dedicated...

Russia says has grounds to disqualify ex-premier

MOSCOW - Russia's Central Election Commission said on Thursday it had grounds to disqualify former prime minister Mikhail Kasyanov from running as an independent in a March presidential election, news agencies reported.

Kasyanov was Putin's first prime minister but became a Kremlin critic after losing his job in 2004.

"The number of valid signatures (in support of Kasyanov) is less than two million, which is grounds for refusing the candidate's registration for the post of Russian president," said Commission secretary Nikolai Konkin, according to TASS news agency.

Former Russian prime minister Mikhail Kasyanov listens during a news conference in his office in Moscow, January 22, 2008. (REUTERS/Denis Sinyakov)

Commission officials could not immediately be reached for comment on the reports.

All independent candidates who want to run as candidates for the March 2 election must provide at least two million signatures in support of their bid. No more than 50,000 names may come from any one of Russia's 85 regions.

Yelena Dikun, a spokeswoman for Kasyanov, disputed the election commission's findings.

"The number of forged signatures is negligible ... Our lawyers are preparing objections and we will be insisting that the Central Election Commission take these into account," she said.

Opinion polls give Kasyanov no chance of beating Kremlin frontrunner Dmitry Medvedev in the election, but if he is disqualified it could leave Russia open to accusations that the contest is one-sided.

"A total of 13.38 percent of signatures collected in Mikhail Kasyanov's support were concocted," Russian news agencies quoted Central Election Commission member Gennady Raikov as saying earlier on Thursday.

Prosecutors this week opened a criminal investigation into Kasyanov's campaign, saying some of the signatures he submitted to back his bid were forged. Kasyanov says the Kremlin is trying to sabotage his campaign.

Russian election chiefs have officially registered three candidates for the election: Medvedev, nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky, and Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov.

All three are exempt from the signature requirement because their parties are represented in Russia's State Duma (lower house of parliament). Officials are checking the signatures submitted by another candidate, independent Andrei Bogdanov.

Zhirinovsky avoids criticism of Putin and his party usually votes with Kremlin loyalists in parliament.

Officials in Zyuganov's party said this week they did not rule out his withdrawing from the election because it was slanted in Medvedev's favour, though Zyuganov himself later said no decision had been made.

Read More News Dedicated...

Russia revives Soviet-era Atlantic navy exercises

MOSCOW - Russian warships and bombers took part in military manoeuvres off the Atlantic coast of France and Spain on Tuesday in what Moscow billed as its biggest navy exercise in the area since Soviet times.

Russia sent two long-range "Blackjack" bombers to the Bay of Biscay to carry out a simulated electronic test-firing of cruise missiles, while anti-submarine aircraft patrolled the area.

File photo of a Tupolev-160 "Blackjack" strategic bomber taking off at a military airfield in Priluky. Russian warships and bombers took part in military manoeuvres off the Atlantic coast of France and Spain on Tuesday in what Moscow billed as its biggest navy exercise in the area since Soviet times. (REUTERS/Mikhail Chernichkin/Files)

The exercise off the coast of two NATO alliance members is the latest Kremlin demonstration of resurgent military muscle on the world stage and likely to appeal to voters choosing a successor to President Vladimir Putin in March.

Putin, expected to retain considerable influence in the country on stepping down after a maximum second term, has done much to rebuild forces depleted after the collapse of communism. For years, commanders had complained ships could not put to sea and warplanes could not fly because of fuel and parts shortages.

Russia's air force said British and Norwegian Tornado and F-16 jets shadowed the Russian aircraft. France said it had been informed about the exercises.

Russian Tupolev Tu-160 bombers joined an aircraft carrier group, submarine hunters and a battleship from the Northern and Black Sea fleets for the exercises.

"The air force is taking a very active part in the exercises of the navy's strike force in the Atlantic," Russia's air force spokesman said.

He said there would only be an electronic simulated test launch of cruise missiles, clarifying an earlier statement which said missiles would be test-launched.

SABRE RATTLING

A former KGB lieutenant-colonel, Putin has renewed long-range bomber missions and approved a plan to upgrade Russia's nuclear attack forces, which he said was needed after NATO built up its forces close to Russia's borders.

But some analysts note that while the sabre rattling is popular at home, Russian military spending in absolute terms is substantially lower than that of China, Britain or France and less than a tenth of that of the United States.

"Russia is making some rather modest steps in its military development but is using these steps for inappropriate propaganda, and that propaganda is for internal consumption," Moscow-based military analyst Alexander Golts said.

Discipline is still a major problem for Russia's armed forces, which rely heavily on conscripts and outdated equipment.

Russia last month said it would begin major navy sorties into the Mediterranean, with 11 ships backed up by 47 aircraft, that would then travel to the Atlantic for exercises.

The navy's flagship aircraft carrier, the Soviet-made Admiral Kuznetsov, was leading the fleet in the Atlantic where NATO aircraft were trying to keep a close eye on Russian movements, Russian media reported.

"This is the biggest exercise of its kind in the area since Soviet times," a spokesman for Russia's navy said.

Russia's air force said turbo-prop Tupolev Tu-95 strategic bombers, codenamed "Bear" by NATO, would join the exercise on Wednesday, along with at least another five types of aircraft

Read More News Dedicated...

Russia offers Britain way-out of culture row

MOSCOW- Russia on Monday held out the prospect that the British government's cultural arm could re-open its offices, the subject of a bitter row, if Britain restarts talks on counter-terrorism and entry visas.

Russia forced the British Council to shut its two offices outside Moscow last week after a dispute in which officials summoned the Council's local staff for interviews and Britain accused Moscow of using Cold War-style intimidation tactics.

British diplomats say Russia's move against the Council offices was part of a feud that has been simmering since Kremlin critic and Russian emigre Alexander Litvinenko was killed by radiation poisoning in London in 2006.

A car drives past the building of the British Council in Moscow January 18, 2008. Russia on Monday held out the prospect that the British government's cultural arm could re-open its offices, the subject of a bitter row, if Britain restarts talks on counter-terrorism and entry visas. (REUTERS/Alexander Natruskin)

A Russian foreign ministry official on Monday linked talks on the status of the British Council's regional offices to resuming counter-terrorism cooperation with Russia's Federal Security and talks on relaxing visa rules.

"If all this returns to a normal state of affairs ... then it will create the conditions for negotiations on the status of the offices," said Andrei Krivtsov, deputy director of the foreign ministry's information and press department.

"In such a way it will be a step towards reopening the (British Council) representative offices," he said.

The counter-terrorism and visa talks were suspended in the diplomatic fallout from the Litvinenko murder, when Russia refused to extradite Andrei Lugovoy, the man Britain suspects of killing him. Lugovoy denies any role in Litvinenko's death.

The British Council promotes Britain's culture abroad by organising exhibitions, concerts and student exchanges. Russia says its regional offices were operating illegally. Talks to find a solution were also suspended over the Litvinenko affair.

Read More News Dedicated...

Kremlin foe says being pressed out of presidential race

MOSCOW - Former Russian Prime Minister and Kremlin critic Mikhail Kasyanov said on Saturday the interior and justice ministries were conducting a coordinated campaign to prevent him running for president.

The March 2 presidential election looks almost certain to be won by current President Vladimir Putin's preferred candidate Dmitry Medvedev, allowing the popular Putin to retain influence after the constitution obliges him to step down.

Kasyanov, who earlier this week applied to the Central Election Commission to run, said state law-enforcement officials were putting heavy pressure upon members of his opposition Popular Democratic Front.

Former Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov speaks to the media outside the office of the Central Election Commission in Moscow January 16, 2008. Kasyanov said on Saturday the interior and justice ministries were conducting a coordinated campaign to prevent him running for president. (REUTERS/Alexander Natruskin)

"With references to orders by higher authorities, people are threatened, pressed to confess to alleged illegal activities, forced to abandon membership in the political party," Kasyanov said in a statement published on his web site.

"I am decidedly protesting against the anti-constitutional and provocative actions of the authorities which are supposed to guard law and order," he added.

Kasyanov is running as an independent in the election because his party is not represented in a parliament dominated by pro-Kremlin groups.

The election commission is expected decide on Jan. 27 whether he is qualified to stand as a presidential candidate.

Kasyanov, who entered politics as an opposition leader after Putin dismissed him as prime minister in 2004, has said he did not hope for fair presidential campaign as television was denied to him on state-controlled channels.

Critics say Putin will exploit his power and control over the biggest media outlets to ensure victory for Medvedev.

Putin's supporters say Putin has restored stability to Russia after the chaos of the immediate post-Soviet period of market reforms.

Read More News Dedicated...