U.S. Defense Chief Scoffs At Russian Warnings To Poland

Robert Gates

WASHINGTON -- U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates has dismissed as "empty rhetoric" Russian warnings that Moscow would target Poland for a possible military strike because Warsaw agreed to host part of a U.S. missile shield.

"Russia is not going to launch nuclear missiles at anybody," Gates told ABC News. "The Poles know that. We know it."

Colonel General Anatoliy Nogovitsyn, deputy chief of the Russian General Staff, told Interfax on August 15 that Russian military doctrine would allow for a possible nuclear strike, after Warsaw agreed to deploy 10 interceptors at a site in Poland as part of the missile shield.

This was "strident rhetoric and probably fairly empty rhetoric," said Gates, a former CIA director and expert on Russia.

"I'm not quite sure why this deputy chief of staff felt compelled to make those kinds of threats," Gates said, adding that the threat was a throwback to the days of the old Soviet Union, when Moscow was Poland's overlord in the Warsaw Pact.

Poland is now a member of the NATO alliance.

Rice To Warsaw


Warsaw agreed on August 14 to host the 10 interceptors after Washington agreed to boost Poland's air defenses. The Czech Republic agreed to host a radar for the shield, although both countries' parliaments must approve the agreements.

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told "Fox News Sunday" she would go to Warsaw this week to sign the missile shield deal, after attending a NATO meeting in Belgium on August 19.

Washington says the shield will be aimed at protecting the United States and its allies from long-range missiles that could be fired by Iran or groups such as Al-Qaeda.

The Kremlin has long disputed this, and opposed the planned shield as a threat to Russia. Russia's nuclear arsenal includes more than 5,000 ballistic warheads.

'Really An Old Song'

Tension between Moscow and Washington has risen in recent days, since Georgia's attempt to retake separatist South Ossetia by force provoked a massive Russian counterattack. Russia said on August 17 it would start withdrawing on august 18.

In a separate interview with CNN, Gates said Washington had agreed to give Moscow physical and technical access to the missile-shield installations.

"We have agreed, along with our partners in Poland and the Czech Republic, to give the Russians access both physical and technical access so they know what's going on every step of the way," he said.

"We've agreed not to even make the interceptors operational until the Iranians have test-launched a missile that has the range to hit much of Western Europe, not to mention Russia. So this [Russian warning] is really an old song that they're singing and it really just doesn't play," he said.