Russia has scrapped a plan to deploy missiles in a region near Poland after President Barack Obama cancelled his predecessor's plan for a US missile defence in Eastern Europe, a Russian deputy defence minister said today.
Vladimir Popovkin told Ekho Moskvyradio that president Mr Obama's move has made the deployment of Iskander short-range missiles in the Kaliningrad region unnecessary.
"Reason has prevailed over ambitions," Mr Popovkin said. "Naturally, we will cancel countermeasures which Russia has planned in response."
There had already been signals that Russia would scrap the plan after Mr Obama's move, announced on Thursday, but Mr Popovkin's statement is the clearest announcement of it.
Russia staunchly opposed the plan by the former administration of George W. Bush to deploy 10 missile interceptors in Poland and a related radar in the Czech Republic and said if the project went ahead it would respond by deploying the Iskander missiles in its westernmost Baltic Sea region.
President Obama's decision to scrap the plan was based largely on a new US intelligence assessment that Iran's effort to build a nuclear-capable long-range missile would take three to five years longer than originally thought, US officials said.
The new US missile-defence plan would rely on a network of sensors and interceptor missiles based at sea, on land and in the air as a bulwark against Iranian short- and medium-range missiles.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev hailed Mr Obama's decision as a "responsible move," but Russian officials have given no indication yet that Moscow could edge closer to the US stance on Iran. Washington is counting on Moscow to help raise pressure on Tehran over its nuclear program.
Mr Obama is to meet President Medvedev at the United Nations and the Group of 20 economic summit in the coming week.
Mr Medvedev's predecessor and mentor, Vladimir Putin, who is widely believed to be continuing to call the shots as Russia's prime minister, also praised Mr Obama's decision but challenged the US to do more by canceling Cold War-era restrictions on trade with Russia and facilitating Moscow's entry into the World Trade Organization.
It has remained unclear what behind-the-scenes talks went on between Moscow and Washington before Mr Obama's announcement. Russian officials said they had made no concessions in return.
A Medvedev foreign policy adviser Sergei Prikhodko said yesterday the move would require the Kremlin to "attentively consider new possibilities opening up for cooperation and interaction," but gave no indication what compromises Moscow could make.
AP