Moscow skeptical of quick progress with US - (Reuters: Putin)
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Friendly words ahead of President Barack Obama's first meeting next week with Kremlin chief Dmitry Medvedev mask deep policy differences and rapid progress is unlikely, Moscow-based experts said.
Hopes of a breakthrough were raised by Washington's offer to "press the reset button" on deadlocked relations with Moscow after Obama's election, and by Medvedev's positive response.
"I can't say that after a few days we will have a new epoch," said Russian lawmaker Andrei Klimov, an expert on worldwide relations with the ruling United Russia party. "In reality, it's a long way away."
Washington wants Russia's help in curbing Iran's nuclear ambitions, reining in North Korea's missile program, allowing supplies through its territory to NATO forces in Afghanistan and fighting the global financial crisis.
Before talks with former U.S. secretary of state Henry Kissinger and a delegation of U.S. elder statesmen on March 20, Medvedev said Moscow was counting on a reset in relations, adding: "I hope that it will happen."
Analysts said that comment masked the fact that the Kremlin's agenda is very different to the White House's.
"Russia doesn't want to join your Atlantic system of values and doesn't want to join in rules of a game shaped by others," Tatiana Parkhalina, the director of the Moscow-based Center for European Security told Reuters.
"For the Kremlin, the post-Soviet space is our back yard and the West should not come in," Parkhalina said.
Amongst the key disagreements are U.S. plans to install elements of a anti-missile system in Europe, NATO's expansion into ex-Soviet states, Russia's role in last year's Georgia war and assessments of the threat from Iran's nuclear projects.
Klimov said the general view in Moscow was that with this long list of disagreements, the best that could be expected was good personal chemistry between the two leaders, who meet in London on April 1 on the eve of a G20 summit in London.
"There are too many questions without final solutions," he added.
Even if Moscow and Washington sincerely want to start afresh on topics like the anti-missile system or Iran, it will take more than a good rapport between the leaders, said Nikolai Zlobin of the Washington-based World Security Institute.
'INTELLECTUAL DEAD END'
"It's a political and mental dead end for both sides about how to reset relations, they don't know how to, the agenda is the same and the conflicts stay the same," Zlobin said.
Whatever progress Obama might make with Medvedev, he will still have to win over Russia's powerful prime minister Vladimir Putin, who still dominates the country's political scene.
Hopes of a breakthrough were raised by Washington's offer to "press the reset button" on deadlocked relations with Moscow after Obama's election, and by Medvedev's positive response.
"I can't say that after a few days we will have a new epoch," said Russian lawmaker Andrei Klimov, an expert on worldwide relations with the ruling United Russia party. "In reality, it's a long way away."
Washington wants Russia's help in curbing Iran's nuclear ambitions, reining in North Korea's missile program, allowing supplies through its territory to NATO forces in Afghanistan and fighting the global financial crisis.
Before talks with former U.S. secretary of state Henry Kissinger and a delegation of U.S. elder statesmen on March 20, Medvedev said Moscow was counting on a reset in relations, adding: "I hope that it will happen."
Analysts said that comment masked the fact that the Kremlin's agenda is very different to the White House's.
"Russia doesn't want to join your Atlantic system of values and doesn't want to join in rules of a game shaped by others," Tatiana Parkhalina, the director of the Moscow-based Center for European Security told Reuters.
"For the Kremlin, the post-Soviet space is our back yard and the West should not come in," Parkhalina said.
Amongst the key disagreements are U.S. plans to install elements of a anti-missile system in Europe, NATO's expansion into ex-Soviet states, Russia's role in last year's Georgia war and assessments of the threat from Iran's nuclear projects.
Klimov said the general view in Moscow was that with this long list of disagreements, the best that could be expected was good personal chemistry between the two leaders, who meet in London on April 1 on the eve of a G20 summit in London.
"There are too many questions without final solutions," he added.
Even if Moscow and Washington sincerely want to start afresh on topics like the anti-missile system or Iran, it will take more than a good rapport between the leaders, said Nikolai Zlobin of the Washington-based World Security Institute.
'INTELLECTUAL DEAD END'
"It's a political and mental dead end for both sides about how to reset relations, they don't know how to, the agenda is the same and the conflicts stay the same," Zlobin said.
Whatever progress Obama might make with Medvedev, he will still have to win over Russia's powerful prime minister Vladimir Putin, who still dominates the country's political scene.




