Tag Archives: Moldova

Romania: Anti-missile interceptors to be deployed

Romania‘s defense minister said Tuesday U.S. plans to deploy anti-missile interceptors in his country are going ahead and that Romania has an “exceptional” partnership with the United States.

U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel last week announced that plans to place long-range missile interceptors in the final stage of its European system are being abandoned. U.S. officials have stressed they will deploy shorter-range missiles to Poland and Romania.

Mircea Dusa told the Associated Press on Tuesday that “I have very serious assurances from the American side that the investment in Romania will continue,” and interceptors will be deployed in 2015.

“Our military cooperation (with the U.S.) since we joined NATO is an exceptional one.”

He said the changes in the defense system plans were caused by spending cuts, not political considerations.

“There is a worldwide problem with the economic crisis and in 2013 very many states are spending less on their defense budgets,” he told the AP.

He says Romanian officials were informed three weeks ago followed by confirmation “two to three hours” before the U.S. announcement.

He refused to be drawn on Russia‘s opposition to the anti-missile interceptors beyond saying that Romania had “normal” relations with Moscow.

Russia has complained about the U.S. plan, with the Kremlin saying it believes it is aimed against Russia‘s missile program. Washington adamantly denies that and says the system is meant to stop missiles from Iran and North Korea.

Romania‘s relations have cooled with Russia since Romania joined NATO in 2004 and also over the former Soviet republic of Moldova, which used to be part of Romania. Some three-quarters of Moldova‘s 4.1 million citizens are of Romanian descent and tens of thousands have Romanian citizenship, but Russia continues to wield economic and political influence.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

The Science Of Sleeplessness

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Nathaniel Kleitman, known as the “father of modern sleep research,” was born in 1895 in Bessarabia — now Moldova — and spent much of his youth on the run. First, pogroms drove him to Palestine; then the First World War chased him to the United States. At the age of twenty, he landed in New York penniless; by twenty-eight, he’d worked his way through City College and earned a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. Soon after, he joined the faculty there. An early sponsor of Kleitman’s sleep research was the Wander Company, which manufactured Ovaltine and hoped to promote it as a remedy for insomnia.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post