From the Los Angeles Times
Clinton calls Russia a 'great power' after Biden's earlier, harsher
remarks
The
secretary of State seeks to calm Moscow after Vice President Biden's
recent comments that the country is badly damaged economically and its
leadership is clinging to the past.
By Paul Richter
12:12 PM PDT, July 26, 2009
Reporting from
Washington —
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said today that the Obama
administration viewed Russia as a "great power," despite Vice President
Biden's observations that the former rival nation was saddled with
deepening economic problems and backward-looking leadership.
Clinton, seeking to take the edge off Biden's recent remarks,
acknowledged that the longtime adversaries have problems with one
anothers' policies. "They have questions about our policies and we have
questions about some of theirs," she said in an appearance on NBC's
"Meet the Press."
But she insisted that the two countries are seeking to work out their
differences and that the United States respects Moscow.
"We view Russia as a great power," she said, adding that the two
countries were already beginning to see the "resetting" of relations
that had been President Obama's aim.
The vice president roiled relations with Moscow by describing Russia as
a country with a badly damaged economy, a fragile banking structure and
a leadership that is "clinging to something in the past that is not
sustainable."'
Biden's remarks, in an interview with the Wall Street Journal, came at
the end of a four-day visit to Georgia and Ukraine in which he
reassured the two countries of U.S. support in the face of Russian
pressure. Moscow, vexed that Biden should be criticizing Russia so soon
after Obama's summit meeting there, demanded a clarification of his
comments.
Though Russia's powers have diminished greatly since the days of the
Soviet Union, Moscow's cooperation is vital for U.S. efforts to deal
with Iran, North Korea, Afghanistan and Arab-Israeli peace. Obama's
trip to Moscow was intended to reduce the tensions.
But Biden suggested that Russia had a weak hand and may have no choice
but to accede to American wishes because of its deepening problems,
including a "withering" economy.
On another issue, Clinton today said she preferred to remain ambiguous
about whether the United States would offer Iran's neighbors nuclear
protection from Iran if Tehran developed nuclear-weapons capability.
Clinton stirred wide comment in the Middle East last week by saying
that the United States might erect a "defense umbrella" over the region
to protect allies if Tehran succeeded in what Washington believed were
efforts to acquire nuclear weapons know-how.
Those remarks left unclear whether the umbrella would mean that the
United States would respond with a nuclear strike on Iran if Tehran
used a nuclear weapon on a neighbor. Clinton, asked for a
clarification, said, "We are not talking in specifics because that
would come later, if at all."
Her comments on the "defense umbrella" were intended to persuade Iran
that it would face a graver security situation with a bomb than without
one.
Clinton also sought to signal that she felt comfortable as part of what
some have called a "team of rivals" in the Obama Cabinet.
She said she had in her office a picture of William Seward, the New
York senator and Lincoln political rival who joined Lincoln's Cabinet
as secreatry of State to help Lincoln during the war.
Clinton has been struggling to make her voice heard in foreign policy
at a time when a long list of administration luminaries, including
Biden, special envoys George Mitchell and Richard C. Holbrooke, and
Obama's own aides, are vying for attention.
She described herself as "the chief adviser" the "chief executor" and
the "chief diplomat" but said that ultimately Obama made the foreign
policy decisions.
Clinton tried to dampen expectations that she would ever again be
interested in seeking the presidency. But she stopped short of
categorically ruling out a future run.
She said, "I have absolutely no belief in my mind that this is going to
happen."'
Copyright 2009 Los Angeles Times