US and Czechs in missile defence talks
THE Czech prime minister said yesterday that his government had been negotiating a plan with the United States to place a warning center in the Czech Republic as part of a reworked US missile defense plan.
Petr Necas said the purpose of the center was to gather and analyze information from satellites "to detect missiles aiming at NATO territory."
"It's not supposed to be a huge military installation," Necas said.
He said only several people will be needed to run the center, and that they could be from the US, NATO member countries or Czechs after undergoing training.
It is not clear yet where in the country the installation could be based or when it could become operational. Necas said Prague was an option.
The US plans to invest US$2 million initially in 2011 and 2012 for the center, which is expected to become part of a joint NATO missile defense shield in the future, Necas said.
In September, the Obama administration scrapped Bush-era blueprints for basing long-range interceptors in Poland and a radar system in the Czech Republic as part of a missile defense shield designed to shoot down long-range missiles from countries including Iran. It was strongly opposed by Russia and unpopular with the Czech public.
The new system is focused on short- and medium-range interceptors.
US Vice President Joe Biden won agreement from the Czech Republic and Poland to join Obama's reconfigured missile defense plan during his visit to Prague and Warsaw in October.
To build the center, no new Czech-US deal or parliamentary approval will be needed, Necas said.
His government may support the new US plan but opponents say they are ready to protest again.
"It's too serious to be silent," said Jan Tamas who organized numerous protest rallies against the radar base proposed by the Bush administration.
Petr Necas said the purpose of the center was to gather and analyze information from satellites "to detect missiles aiming at NATO territory."
"It's not supposed to be a huge military installation," Necas said.
He said only several people will be needed to run the center, and that they could be from the US, NATO member countries or Czechs after undergoing training.
It is not clear yet where in the country the installation could be based or when it could become operational. Necas said Prague was an option.
The US plans to invest US$2 million initially in 2011 and 2012 for the center, which is expected to become part of a joint NATO missile defense shield in the future, Necas said.
In September, the Obama administration scrapped Bush-era blueprints for basing long-range interceptors in Poland and a radar system in the Czech Republic as part of a missile defense shield designed to shoot down long-range missiles from countries including Iran. It was strongly opposed by Russia and unpopular with the Czech public.
The new system is focused on short- and medium-range interceptors.
US Vice President Joe Biden won agreement from the Czech Republic and Poland to join Obama's reconfigured missile defense plan during his visit to Prague and Warsaw in October.
To build the center, no new Czech-US deal or parliamentary approval will be needed, Necas said.
His government may support the new US plan but opponents say they are ready to protest again.
"It's too serious to be silent," said Jan Tamas who organized numerous protest rallies against the radar base proposed by the Bush administration.
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