Tag Archives: Alexei Pushkov

Russian arms trader says weapon shipments to Syria will continue

Russia will keep supplying weapons to Syrian President Bashar Assad‘s regime despite the country’s escalating civil war, the head of Russia‘s state arms trader said Wednesday.

Russia on Wednesday also held out the prospect of bringing the two sides in the Syrian conflict together for talks in Moscow. Mikhail Bogdanov, a deputy foreign minister and special envoy to the Middle East, said Syria‘s foreign minister and the leader of the Syrian National Coalition are expected in Moscow in two to three weeks. He said no date for either visit has been set.

“We are prepared to provide the venue for Syrian talks if they want to meet in Moscow,” Bogdanov was quoted by Russian news agencies as saying.

Anatoly Isaikin, the director of Rosoboronexport, said Russia sees no need to stop its arms trade with Syria as the trade isn’t prohibited by the United Nations. He dismissed Western criticism of Russian arms sales to Assad’s regime, saying his company has only delivered defensive weapons.

“In the absence of sanctions, we are continuing to fulfill our contract obligations,” Isaikin said at a news conference. “But these aren’t offensive weapons. We are mostly shipping air defense systems and repair equipment intended for various branches of the military.”

Moscow has been the main protector of Assad’s beleaguered regime, joining with China at the U.N. Security Council to block attempts to impose sanctions on Assad amid a civil war in which more than 60,000 people have died.

For more than four decades, Syria has been Moscow‘s top ally in the region and has received billions of dollars’ worth of missiles, combat jets, tanks, artillery and other military gear. It’s the last Kremlin ally in the Middle East and hosts the only naval base Russia has outside the former Soviet Union.

As the rebel offensive against Assad has intensified, the Kremlin has sought to distance itself from Assad, signaling that it is resigned to him eventually losing power. But Moscow has continued to oppose sanctions against Damascus and warned that the fall of Assad’s regime could plunge Syria even deeper into violence and also encourage the rise of extremist groups across the region.

Alexei Pushkov, the Kremlin-connected head of foreign affairs committee in the Russian parliament’s lower house, said Wednesday that Assad’s downfall would create a “second Afghanistan” and reaffirmed that Russia would continue to reject the calls for the Syrian ruler’s resignation as a precondition for peace talks.

Russia has bristled at Western demands to stop providing Assad with arms, arguing that its weapons trade with Damascus doesn’t contradict international law. In June, a Russian-operated ship carrying helicopter gunships and air defense missiles was forced to turn back to Russia after its British insurer canceled coverage for the vessel.

Russia said the vessel was carrying three refurbished helicopters belonging to Syria, and criticized Britain for forcing the ship to turn back, saying it wouldn’t abide by European sanctions against the Assad regime.

The helicopters were repaired and sent back to Syria by a different Russian firm, and Isaikin insisted that his company hasn’t shipped any …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Russia pulls out of anti-crime deal with US, says it doesn't need help

Russia pulled out of an anti-crime accord with the United States on Wednesday, the latest sign of rising tensions between Moscow and Washington.

Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev has signed an order to scrap the 10-year-old agreement “because it was no longer relevant,” his office said.

The agreement covered fighting terrorism, corruption and cross-border crimes such as drug smuggling and human trafficking.

Alexei Pushkov, head of Russia‘s parliamentary foreign affairs committee, told the Interfax news agency that the decision reflected Russia‘s ability to manage its internal affairs without outside help.

A U.S. embassy spokesman was not immediately available for comment.

The agreement is just one of several bilateral cooperation deals that Moscow has decided to abandon. Last year, Russia expelled the U.S. International Development Agency and also warned it wouldn’t extend the Nunn-Lugar program helping it dismantle nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons stockpiles.

On Friday, the U.S. withdrew from a joint civil society group.

President Barack Obama‘s efforts to “reset” relations with Russia has met a markedly colder wind from the Kremlin since Vladimir Putin returned to the presidency in May. Faced with unprecedented street protests against his 12-year rule, Putin accused the U.S. State Department of staging the protests in order to weaken Russia.

After Putin’s inauguration, the Kremlin-controlled parliament then quickly rubber-stamped a series of laws imposing new restrictions in an apparent bid to curb American influence in Russia. Non-governmental organizations funded from abroad were required to register as “foreign agents,” a term intended to ruin their credibility among Russians for whom the term sounds synonymous to spies. The Russian definition of treason was also expanded to include potentially any contact with a foreign organization.

Two U.S.-based NGOs have closed their Russian offices in response to the new laws. The business daily Kommersant reported Wednesday that the National Democratic Institute and the International Republican Institute, which ran programs championing democratic rights, moved their staff to Lithuania after Russian security officials threatened to prosecute them under the new treason law.

Amnesty International Russia director Sergei Nikitin wrote on his blog Wednesday that the closures “show the stability of the general trend: the pressure on civil society in Russia continues.”

After Congress passed a law introducing sanctions against Russian officials involved in human rights abuses, Russia responded by banning all adoptions of Russian orphans by Americans. The country’s top investigative agency is also investigating a sexual abuse case against American parents already convicted in the U.S. of abusing their adopted Russian child but given suspended sentences.

Lawmakers in the Kremlin-controlled lower house have also rushed to propose such measures as banning English phrases from Russian and limiting marriages between Russian officials and foreigners.

Outgoing U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told NPR on Wednesday that the Russian adoption ban was “tragic” and the decision to expel the USAID “really hurts the Russian people.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News