Obama travels to Russia seeking arms, Afghan deals

2009年 07月 6日 05:49 JST
 

By Michael Stott

MOSCOW (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama and Russian leader Dmitry Medvedev expect to make progress on arms cuts and Afghanistan at a Kremlin summit on Monday but the rest of Obama's first visit as president may be more difficult.

During two days of talks, officials say Obama will spur negotiations on reducing U.S. and Russian nuclear arsenals and win the Kremlin's consent to ship weapons to NATO forces in Afghanistan across Russian territory.

Obama will also meet business chiefs and listen to the country's embattled democratic opposition. But he faces a harder task in trying to achieve his aim of a "reset" in overall relations between Washington and Moscow.

Ties hit their worst level since the Cold War last year after Russia sent troops into neighboring Georgia, a U.S. ally, triggering fierce condemnation from Washington.

Medvedev has said he is "moderately optimistic" about Obama's visit but the two sides are still deeply divided over U.S. plans to set up an anti-missile system in central Europe, something Russia says threatens its security.

This, as well as Russian resentment at NATO expansion into the former Soviet Union, could yet cast a cloud over the talks.

A poll released on the eve of Obama's arrival showed the depth of Russian distrust of the United States. The University of Maryland survey found 75 percent of Russians believed the U.S. abused its greater power and only two percent had "a lot of confidence" Obama would do the right thing in world affairs.  続く...

 
 
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