
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice (L) shakes hand with
Chile's Foreign Minister Alejandro Foxley before a meeting at the Foreign
Affairs Ministry at the Santiago March 14, 2008.
SANTIAGO, March 14 (Xinhua) -- Russia has showed greater openness toward
the U.S. missile defense system for Eastern Europe and expressed interest in a
U.S. proposal, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said here Friday.
The U.S. move to deploy a missile defense radar in the Czech Republic and
interceptor missiles in Poland by 2012 was fiercely opposed by Russia, which has
seen it as a Western provocation at its doorstep. The United States claims that
the system is designed to counter possible attacks from rogue states such as
Iran.
Rice, who was on a Latin American trip, told reporters here that she would
visit Moscow next week with U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates to have a
face-to-face meeting,.
Rice declined to elaborate on what proposal Moscow is interested in, but
said she would not go so far as to say that Russia's opposition to the plan had
diminished.
The interest Russia has shown "might be worth Bob Gates and I going out to
see whether or not we can clarify and develop some of the ideas," Rice said.
"In private, we've had good discussions with the Russians," Rice said.
The two countries have wrangled over the U.S. planned missile defense
system. Russia said it would challenge Russia's national security and threatened
to target its missiles at the system if itwas deployed.
Rice was also scheduled to meet with Russian President VladimirPutin and
his successor Dmitry Medvedev during her visit to Russia.