U.S., Russia still haggling on arms before Obama visit
By Guy Faulconbridge
MOSCOW (Reuters) - On the eve of President Barack Obama's first visit to Moscow, Russia and the United States were on Sunday still bargaining on an outline deal to cut Cold War arsenals of nuclear weapons.
Obama arrives on Monday to meet Kremlin chief Dmitry Medvedev at what is being billed as a summit that could "reset" U.S-Russia relations after they hit a Cold War low under George W. Bush.
But, in comments which underline continuing deep differences between Washington and Moscow, Medvedev said in an interview published on Sunday that the United States must compromise on plans to deploy an anti-missile system in Europe.
This was necessary to get a deal to replace the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START I) before it expires on Dec. 5, the Russian leader said.
"We consider these issues are interconnected," Medvedev said in an interview with Italian media that was broadcast on Russian state television Sunday.
"It is sufficient to show restraint and show an ability to compromise. And then we can agree on the basis of a new deal on START and at the same time can agree on the question of how we move forward on anti-missile defence," he said.
Russia's Interfax news agency quoted a highly placed source in the Moscow Foreign Ministry as saying that a so-called framework agreement the presidents were due to sign on nuclear cuts is not yet ready, less than 24 hours before Obama arrives.
The framework deal was supposed to be the centrepiece of Obama's visit to Moscow, where he will also meet Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who has repeatedly warned the United States that Russia would not accept plans for the missile system in Europe. Continued...
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