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other related news items.MOSCOW (Reuters) - President Vladimir Putin warned the United States on
Thursday that Russia could take retaliatory measures if Washington failed to
take heed of its concerns over a missile defense shield in Europe.
"I can assure you that such steps are being prepared and we will take them.
Where we should station what, that is for specialists of the Russian military's
general staff," Putin said in response to a question about how to respond to the
shield.
The United States plans to place interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar
system in the Czech Republic as part of a shield Washington says is needed to
counter possible attacks from "rogue states" such as Iran and North Korea.
Russia says the shield is a threat to its security and could spark an arms race,
concerns U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert
Gates sought to ease in Moscow talks last week. Putin welcomed their efforts.
"The latest contacts with our American colleagues show that they have indeed
given some thought to the proposals we made and they are looking for a solution
to the problems and for ways to ease our concerns," Putin said.
Putin's comments appeared to echo a warning made in July by First Deputy Prime
Minister Sergei Ivanov that Russia could deploy new missiles, including in its
Baltic enclave of Kaliningrad, in response to the missile shield.
His warning on missile defense was in response to a question from a voter in
Kaliningrad, Russia's westernmost outpost, at a three-hour annual
question-and-answer session.
The Kremlin leader also said Russia was working on new types of nuclear weapons
as part of a "grandiose" plan to boost the country's defenses.
Military experts have speculated that Russia could eventually deploy its new
Iskander-M tactical missiles to counter the U.S. missile shield.
POLAND'S RESPONSE
Russian generals say the shield would allow the United States to scan Russia's
territory as far as the Urals, and would give the Pentagon the capability to
shoot
down Russian ballistic missiles soon after launch.
Putin has offered the United States joint use of a Russia-leased radar station
in Azerbaijan as an alternative to the missile shield in Europe.
Kaliningrad is surrounded by new NATO members Poland and Lithuania. The city of
Kaliningrad -- the former Prussian city of Koenigsberg which was seized by
Russia as a World War Two trophy -- is closer to Warsaw than Moscow.
Polish Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski said on Thursday in Warsaw that hosting
the shield could help protect his country, citing a possible threat from Russia.
Poland, which votes in a parliamentary election on Sunday, has previously said
the shield was not linked to Russia.
"This will boost our security ..... We have to remember that we are in a state
of permanent threat. The Russians have not accepted the changes since 1989 and
it is obvious that they consider us as within their sphere of influence," he
said at a news
conference."
Kaczynski was referring to the fall of communism in 1989, which ended Soviet
domination over Poland.
(Additional reporting by Natalia Reiter and Conor Sweeney)
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