CBS/AP/ February 20, 2009, 11:07 AM

Gates: U.S. Still Mulling Missile Shield

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates says the new Obama administration hasn't decided what to do about a proposed European missile shield to which Russia objects.

Gates, in Poland for NATO talks, says the economic crisis and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have taken precedence. He says Washington needs a little time to look at the plan laid out by former President George W. Bush to place missile interceptors and radar in Poland and the Czech Republic as protection against a possible strike from Iran.

Poland is one site for a planned U.S. missile shield system that Russia has aggressively protested.

Gates, the lone holdover from the Cabinet of Republican George W. Bush, added caveats to his once ample support of the missile defense plan. The idea was a Bush favorite, but President Barack Obama has not been a vocal supporter of the program.

Still, he hasn't indicated he would cancel it, either; the administration says it wants to make sure the system is reliable and doesn't detract from other security priorities. That has been seen in Europe as a sign that the plan could be scaled back or scrapped.

Gates says he asked his Polish counterpart for patience as the new team gets settled.

Gates did sign a new military cooperation agreement with Poland on Thursday, formalizing ties between the special forces operations of both countries. Gates praised Poland's willingness to send troops into harm's way, including about 1,600 in Afghanistan.

"As an old Cold Warrior it is a true honor to be able to sign this document on behalf of the United States," Gates told Polish Defense Minister Bogdan Klich.

"We have to wait as the American administration works out its view on the future of the missile defense project," Poland's Klich said after the meeting.

"What's left for us to do: To underline and remind people that Poland accepted the American proposal, that last year a deal was signed ... and that the agreement binds both sides, and I stressed that during today's talks," Klich said on TVN24 television.

NATO's agenda, however, is dominated by concerns about a resurgent Taliban insurgency and logistical problems in the NATO-led Afghanistan war. The United States is the largest contributor to NATO's force of 50,000, and has troops stationed in Afghanistan separately. Mr. Obama this week approved sending another 17,000.

NATO's secretary-general said Thursday that efforts to defeat the Taliban in Afghanistan were not succeeding, but alliance members produced no new public pledges of support despite urging from U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates.

NATO spokesman James Appathurai said alliance defense ministers meeting in Krakow, Poland, had welcomed the Obama administration's plan to send 17,000 more U.S. troops to shore up the 65,000 international troops - half of them Americans - fighting resurgent Taliban rebels.

But Appathurai said alliance members would not likely be able to respond to Washington's appeals for help until the NATO summit in April in France and Germany.

"I think we need to look to further weeks and the summit" to get further contributions, Appathurai said.

Before Thursday's start of the two-day conference, Gates said he had largely given up hope that NATO countries - many with strong anti-war constituencies at home - would be willing to commit more troops for the long-term to Afghanistan.

Instead, he told reporters that he would ask his counterparts for help to counter militants and improve security before national elections later this year, and for more nonmilitary assistance such as training Afghan police and counter-narcotics activities.

"I hope that it may be easier for our allies to do that than significant troop increases," Gates said.

NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, who has been pushing for European nations to send more troops, delivered a bleak assessment of the war, acknowledging that the situation was not improving despite the influx of 13,000 additional NATO forces during the past year.

"We are frankly not where we had hoped to be," he said. "The south and east of Afghanistan are riven by insurgency, while drugs and the lack of effective government contribute to the frustration felt by Afghans at the lack of progress in building their country up."

Gates Critical Of Manas Air Base Decision

Kyrgyzstan's parliament voted Thursday to close the base that resupplies military operations in Afghanistan. If Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev signs the bill and an eviction notice follows, the United States will have 180 days to vacate the base.

Bakiyev unexpectedly called this month for the closure of the Manas base, a transit point for 15,000 troops and 500 tons of cargo each month to and from Afghanistan. Russia is widely assumed to be behind the decision, although Moscow denies it.

"I think that the Russians are trying to have it both ways with respect to Afghanistan in terms of Manas," Gates said, referring to the U.S. base in Kyrgyzstan, a former Soviet republic.

"On one hand you're making positive noises about working with us in Afghanistan and on the other hand you're working against us in terms of that airfield which is clearly important to us," Gates said.

But Appathurai played down the importance of the Manas base in supplying the forces in Afghanistan.

"There is plenty of flexibility in the logistical supply chain for NATO and for NATO allies," he said. "There are alternatives; they will be used. And allies will continue to supply their forces as needed."

Although Taliban militants have repeatedly attacked NATO's main logistics line through Pakistan, it remains open and accounts for 80 percent of the supplies used by the international forces, Appathurai said.

An alternate route through Russia also is under consideration.

Polish authorities deployed hundreds of troops and police to secure the meeting. But several hundred protesters rallied peacefully in Krakow's old city center to protest Poland's membership in NATO.

They carried banners reading: "We've already had Moscow, we don't want Washington."
© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
17 Comments Add a Comment
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petro49l says:
Why destroy Poland (and the rest of the world) with launched missiles loaded with thermo-nuclear warheads? The country is beautiful and unspoiled. The United States does not need to defend against Russian or Irani missile attacks in Eastern Europe. It makes better sense to develop bases for interception missiles on submarines or islands in the ocean. The Russians could eliminate the NATO base in Poland with a serious round of missiles directed right at it. NATO could also use the base for offensive missiles or deploy submarines into the region.
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niceface19 says:
They can't even shield the Mexicans coming up from the South West.

They can't even shield street signs, train cars, your home walls, from graffities.....

What can they shield????
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berchesgaden says:
It doesn't take a genius to figure out that
Europe with the exception to the U.K. is not our Allies
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babooph says:
Surely Russia left some nukes burried in central Europe prior to leaving-missle shield would not help-[they also must have sent many into the States thru Mexico in the 50s & 60s so the shield was a scam in the States too.]
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betraid says:
What is Gates doing? He is supposed to be getting us out of Iraq in sixteen, now fifteen months. Not going off starting more wars. Obama might have made a big mistake keeping this guy on.
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tommygun083 says:
Gates demonstrates that he is nothing more than a hold over from the failed Bush administration. First he bankrupts the country fighting an immoral war in Iraq, then engages the military in a dead end adventure in Afghanistan, and now he is pursuing a pipedream of setting up US missile bases along the border with Russia. He has run out of money, our money, and the rest of the world is losing patience with his senseless war games. Besides, the last two military tyrants who tried to invade Russia through Poland ended up getting their backsides handed back in a basket.
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boandco says:
If Poland builds US missile bases, the Russians will line the Polish border with tactical nukes, ready to take out the Polish bases and half the Polish people at the slightest provocation. You only have to look at Georgia to see how the Russian Bear lashes out when you poke it with a stick.
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cdfoxtrot101 says:
This stupid, ineffective missile shield will be a total waste of money, if it proceeds. Protect against what? If Russia wants to take us out, this thing would be a joke. A modern day Maginot Line. Hopefully President Obama will see this as yet another foreign policy **** up by his predecessor and cancel this thing before it p1sses off the Russians even more.
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intheshade-2009 says:
The US and Britain are hoping to make a killing by building an oil pipeline from the Caspian through Afghanistan to India. The other members of NATO don%u2019t stand to benefit so much. Maybe a few construction projects or supply contracts, or in the case of Poland, a few dollars is all they get. NATO citizens are starting to object having their sons and daughters scarified for the money.
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nomealaska says:
The USA is in the business of making enemies, defeating them, training and arming them and then fighting them again. Obviously this is a poor economic model, based on the current state of world economics. But some people do get rich. Cheney and Friends of the Bushes to name a few.
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