US
general Martin Dempsey on Thursday welcomed his Russian counterpart,
giving him the red carpet treatment despite diplomatic tensions over
Syria between Washington and Moscow.
Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, hosted a full honor cordon for Nikolai Makarov, chief of the Russian General Staff and the country's first deputy defense minister, during which 19 salutes were fired in a rare show of pomp by the Pentagon.The meeting of two countries officials and their delegations coincides when Russia rejected as unacceptable the text of a Western-backed UN Security Council resolution on Syria, announcing it will use its veto if the draft is brought to a vote later Thursday.
Talks at the Pentagon are expected to focus on plans for a NATO-backed missile defense shield in Europe, a military source told media.Efforts to set up the ambitious project essentially based on US technology have angered Moscow, which wants guarantees saying the system would not be aimed at or used against it at any time.NATO has said the system does not target Russia but rather a threat from the Middle East, in particular Iran. Russia is particularly concerned about the end of NATO military operations there, as well as the continuing threats of drugs and terrorism. "In particular, at the upcoming meeting we are planning to discuss the situation in Afghanistan," Makarov said. "The withdrawal of Coalition troops is scheduled for 2014, and we are not indifferent to how the situation will evolve near our borders."
Other topics that are expected to be covered include the situation in Afghanistan, as well as the Arab Spring and Washington's "rebalancing to the Asia-Pacific" region, the source said.
Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, hosted a full honor cordon for Nikolai Makarov, chief of the Russian General Staff and the country's first deputy defense minister, during which 19 salutes were fired in a rare show of pomp by the Pentagon.The meeting of two countries officials and their delegations coincides when Russia rejected as unacceptable the text of a Western-backed UN Security Council resolution on Syria, announcing it will use its veto if the draft is brought to a vote later Thursday.
Talks at the Pentagon are expected to focus on plans for a NATO-backed missile defense shield in Europe, a military source told media.Efforts to set up the ambitious project essentially based on US technology have angered Moscow, which wants guarantees saying the system would not be aimed at or used against it at any time.NATO has said the system does not target Russia but rather a threat from the Middle East, in particular Iran. Russia is particularly concerned about the end of NATO military operations there, as well as the continuing threats of drugs and terrorism. "In particular, at the upcoming meeting we are planning to discuss the situation in Afghanistan," Makarov said. "The withdrawal of Coalition troops is scheduled for 2014, and we are not indifferent to how the situation will evolve near our borders."
Other topics that are expected to be covered include the situation in Afghanistan, as well as the Arab Spring and Washington's "rebalancing to the Asia-Pacific" region, the source said.
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