U.S. President George W. Bush will
discuss with President Vladimir Putin Russian contributions to Iran's
nuclear-power program during this week's summit in Moscow and St.
Petersburg, Reuters reported on 20 May. Bush's national security
adviser, Condoleezza Rice, told journalists that Bush "intends to
talk a lot about the Russian-Iranian relationship." "It has been a
problem for several years," Rice said. "We've made a lot of progress
with the Russians on the counterterrorism front. We're going to try
and make progress on the nonproliferation front."
...while Russia to demand role in Central Asian Security
Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov warned on 21 May that Russia "will demand from
the United States transparency in the transportation and presence of
a foreign military contingent in Central Asia," ITAR-TASS reported.
Ivanov applauded U.S.-Russian cooperation in the fight against
international terrorism and said that "we have almost done away with
the threat to Russia and other CIS member countries through the
defeat of terrorists on the territory of Afghanistan." However, he
called for multilateral mechanisms for ensuring security in Central
Asia, citing recent efforts to beef up the Collective Security Treaty
(DKB). "We intend to use at maximum the promising mechanism of the
Shanghai Cooperation Organization," Ivanov said, according to the news agency.
(RFE/RL 21.v.02)