Russia may deploy missiles in Belarus

Updated: 2007-11-15 07:09

Russia may deploy its newest Iskander tactical missiles in neighbouring Belarus in response to US plans for a missile shield in eastern Europe, Russian media quoted a senior general as saying yesterday.

Asked if the missiles could be deployed in response to the US shield, Major-General Vladimir Zaritsky, head of Russia's artillery and missile forces, was quoted as saying by ITAR-TASS news agency: "Why not? Under the right conditions and with the corresponding agreement of Belarus, it is possible."

"Any action inevitably causes a reaction," Zaritsky said. "And this is just the case with the elements of US air defense in the Czech Republic and Poland."

A Belarussian defense ministry spokesman said there had been no discussion of any such deployment in the ex-Soviet state wedged between Russia and three European Union states.

But spokesman Vyacheslav Remenchik said in Minsk that Belarus planned to purchase and incorporate the Iskander in one of its missile brigades by 2020 under its military program.

Washington plans to place 10 interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar in the Czech Republic as part of a shield it says is designed to protect Europe from missile attacks by "rogue states" such as Iran and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

Russia has said this would upset the strategic balance and pose a threat to its security. In July, Moscow proposed the two countries use the Russian-operated early warning Qabala radar in Azerbaijan as an alternative to the US missile shield.

US Defense Secretary Robert Gates said during a visit to Moscow last month the Qabala radar could not replace the US missile shield.

Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko has repeatedly denounced the proposed US shield.

Though he has fallen out with Moscow over increased energy prices, he has offered to work together with the Kremlin to act together to oppose the proposal.

Agencies

(China Daily 11/15/2007 page8)