Skip navigation
advertisement

Obama, Medvedev agree to deal to cut weapons

Russian president calls summit a ‘first but very important step’

Image: Presidents Medvedev and Obama in Moscow
Vladimir Rodionov / AFP - Getty Images
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and his wife Svetlana meet with U.S. President Barack Obama and his wife Michelle outside Moscow in Gorki on Monday after a day of top-level talks.
Video
  Obama defrosts chilly relations
July 6: The U.S. president and his Russian counterpart agree to cut Cold War-era nuclear weapons and let American troops fly in Russian airspace. NBC's Chuck Todd reports from Moscow.

Nightly News

Video
  Loose nukes
July 5: Although Russia has made strides in securing thousands of weapons, it remains at odds with the U.S. over the next steps. NBC’s Jim Maceda reports.

Nightly News

Video
  Obama's 'new relationship' with Russia
July 6: Former Secretary of Defense William Cohen talks about President Obama's approach to the U.S.-Russian summit meeting.

Morning Joe

updated 5:44 p.m. ET July 6, 2009

MOSCOW - Presidents Barack Obama and Dmitry Medvedev confidently committed to a year-end deal to slash nuclear stockpiles by about a third on Monday, but the U.S. leader failed to crack stubborn Kremlin objections to America's missile defense plans — a major stumbling block to such an agreement.

Both men renewed pledges to pull U.S.-Russian relations out of the dismal state into which they had descended during the eight years of the Bush administration. And to that end, they signed a series of agreements and joint statements designed to enliven and quicken contacts on a broad range of issues — including cooperation on Afghanistan, a key Obama foreign policy objective.

Obama said the leaders both felt relations had "suffered from a sense of drift. President Medvedev and I are committed to leaving behind the suspicion and rivalry of the past."

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

His host expressed similar good will.

'Important step'
"This is the first but very important step in improving full-scale cooperation between our two countries, which would go to the benefit of both states," the Russian leader said. But he injected a note of caution, saying discussions so far "cannot remove the burden of all the problems."

There was no statement of Russian readiness to help the United States persuade Iran to abandon its nuclear ambitions, even though Obama's top Russia adviser, Michael McFaul, told reporters in a post-meeting briefing that Iran dominated the two leaders' private meeting that opened the summit. Talks continued in an expanded session that included 12 advisers for each president.

Slideshow
Image: Barack Obama
  Obama in Moscow
The goal of the U.S.-Russia summit is to reduce stockpiles of nuclear weapons and boost cooperation.

more photos

For all the upbeat public statements, a pall of disagreement on missile defense and NATO expansion lingered over the glittering Kremlin hall where Obama and Medvedev answered reporters' questions. Obama said the meetings had been "frank," diplomatic speak for difficult.

Obama sits down on Tuesday with Medvedev's patron and predecessor as president, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, the target of a verbal poke from the U.S. president last Friday. In a pre-summit interview with The Associated Press, Obama said Putin still had one foot in the old, Cold War way of doing things.

While Medvedev insisted on Monday that a replacement to the keystone START I nuclear arms reduction treaty, which expires Dec. 5, must be linked to Russian concerns about the U.S. missile defense program in Eastern Europe, it remained unclear if the Kremlin was prepared to scuttle the negotiations over that issue.

Gary Samore, Obama's chief adviser on weapons of mass destruction and arms control, told reporters he did not believe the Russians were prepared to walk away.

"I think at the end of the day — because our missile defense does not actually pose a threat to Russia's strategic forces — I think they'll be prepared to go ahead without trying to extract a price on missile defense."

And McFaul said it had been made "crystal clear" from the beginning that negotiations about a START replacement would not include any missile defense issues.


Sponsored LinksGet listed here
Top Online Schools
Find the perfect online school and Boost your Career! Free Info Pack.
www.EarnMyDegree.com

Sponsored links

Resource guide