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MISSILE DEFENCE COOPERATION (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   132467


NATO, Russia and missile defence / Zadra, Roberto   Journal Article
Zadra, Roberto Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Talks on NATO-Russia missile-defence cooperation were suspended in April during the crisis over Crimea. In retrospect, the window for a real breakthrough had closed some 18 months earlier. After three and a half years of difficult discussions, the project exploring NATO-Russia missile-defence cooperation is not only suspended, but has probably reached its end. The initiative was an attempt to overcome Cold War thinking and realise the vision of the 2010 NATO-Russia Council Lisbon Summit: a 'true strategic and modernised partnership', and 'a common space of peace, security and stability in the Euro-Atlantic area'.
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2
ID:   080318


Prospects for Russian–American missile defence cooperation: lessons from RAMOS and JDEC / Samson, Victoria   Journal Article
Samson, Victoria Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract American officials have long proclaimed the importance of missile defence cooperation with Russia, and bilateral cooperation on the issue is an obvious solution to missile defence security dilemmas. What are the prospects for bilateral cooperation on missile defence? The year 2007 witnessed an unprecedented missile defence controversy, arising from American plans to base new defence installations in Europe, ostensibly to counter the threat of long-range missiles from Iran. Russian leaders, most prominently President Vladimir Putin, harshly criticized these plans for undermining Russian security and demanded the United States drop its proposal. Instead, Putin offered use of a Russian radar in Azerbaijan to detect missiles from Iran. This article reviews two earlier attempts at bilateral cooperation: the Russian- American Observation Satellite (RAMOS) and the Joint Data Exchange Center (JDEC). One was cancelled. The other has been stalled in endless negotiation. Neither example bodes well for future missile defence cooperation. The technical and logistical difficulties of creating and operating bilateral Russian-American security programs, when combined with residue of Cold War mistrust, make intensive Russian-American missile defence cooperation extremely unlikely
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