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Bush's Missile Defense Radar Plan Riles Czechs
VESIN, Czech Republic - After four decades of Russian domination and the oppressive presence of a nearby Czech military base, villagers in the Brdy region west of Prague got back access to their rolling hills at the end of the Cold War and along with it myriad paths into the thick forests leading to rich patches of wild berries and mushrooms.
That apparently is coming to an end. Not even two decades after one superpower departed the country, another, the United States, this spring announced agreement with the Czech government to set up a base to install U.S. radars for a missile defense system.
There are only about 600 people in this poor but bucolic village in the Brdy district west of Prague, but the view along the cobble-stoned streets is nearly unanimous: they are against the U.S. plan.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has called the American plan a threat to Russian security and threatened to retarget Russian nuclear tipped missiles against Europe. His vitriolic attacks on the missile defense plan seems to have prompted President George Bush's invitation for the summit in Kennebunkport, Maine, that began Sunday evening.
Local villagers have little faith in either leader. They expect their nearby forest will again become forbidden territory and that far from enhancing their security the U.S. installation will add a new threat.
"We're trapped between warring giants," said Josef Skuhra, 57, a village maintenance worker.
"We've always been happy being forgotten about, but now Russia and the United States, who have always been enemies, fight over us. And once the Americans start building, how long can it be before even Osama bin Laden knows our name?"
Vesin may be run-down, and the noise of chirping birds exceeds that of passing cars, but its residents have views. In a recent referendum, 98 per cent voiced opposition to the U.S. plan. In nearby Sedlec, 96.5 percent were against it. In Vranovice, it was 96 percent. And, just up the road, in Rozmital, 94.5 percent oppose the plan. Throughout the Czech Republic, public opinion is 60 per cent against the plan. But most believe the government has made up it's mind, and it will be built here.
Across Europe, almost no prominent defense expert has spoken up for the U.S. proposal, which is designed to protect the U.S. and Western Europe from nuclear missile attacks from "rogue nations" such as Iran.
Some leading experts openly disparage the underlying concept.
Magnus Ranstorp, research director for the Swedish Defense College, and one of the world's foremost experts on terrorism, put it this way: "It's a defense system that doesn't yet work intended to stop a threat that does not yet exist."
The missiles are set to be placed somewhere in southern Poland. The radar that will guide them would be here, somewhere in the Brdy, an hour's drive outside Prague, the Czech capital.
Experts said the Bush administration negotiated the radar deal directly with Poland and the Czech Republic, leaving NATO and European nations out of the loop. By doing so, thereby weakening NATO's stature in Europe.
Ranstorp said Bush's plan, by focusing on missiles, ignores Iran's method of operation: "Iranians always leave themselves plausible deniability. In supporting international terrorism in Afghanistan, Hezbollah in Lebanon or Shi'ite efforts in Iraq, they work through third parties, and stay in the shadows themselves."
The unilateral U.S. drive for an unproven system has in fact divided Europe, according to Otfried Nassauer, an expert on defense policy at the German research center Berlin Institute for Trans-Atlantic Security.
"In the end, Europeans have to decide whether a theoretical defense system is worth a very real split in Europe," he said. "It's classic Bush. He had a plan and he's going ahead with it, no matter the costs or arguments against it."
Nassauer also questioned the system, noting that a similar anti-missile system the U.S. claims is effective employs three stage rockets, while this would require a new system with two-stage rockets and require faster reaction times than the existing system.
"It is a very expensive proposal, he said. "Will the American Congress spend so much to protect Europe?"
In the Czech Republic, the arguments are more basic. Locals expect that fences will be erected to once again close off the Brdy forests if the system is built here. And while villagers acknowledge there are vast differences between U.S. and Soviet military presences, they say both represent outside pressures on their homeland.
"Does it makes us safer?" asked Jan Tamas, spokesman for Czech's small Humanist Party, which has helped organize protests in the villages of the Brdy area. "Clearly, it does not. Instead, it makes our small country a terrorist target. Before we were invisible. It makes us less safe."
"Name one positive thing that could come to us because of this?" asked Lenka Jelinkova, 24, in Rozmital, who said she's usually not political. "From the perspectives of safety, ecology and quality of living, all it promises is destruction."
Government officials say they expect a gain in the project in improved relations with the United States, such as visa-free travel there.
"If the [Czech Republic] is a reliable partner for the missile defense system, it should be a partner who does not need the visa obligation" said Martin Bursik, the vice-prime-minister.
Just across the street from a quaint chapel in Vesin's village square, Jiri Belka, 33, covered with the grime of working in the woods, says they've all noticed the recent increase in the number of military vehicles crawling through forest roads.
"Looks as if they're shopping for the perfect spot," he said. "It's probably a waste of time and money, it doesn't offer anything to this nation, and we clearly don't want it. But who listens to little people like us these days?"
2007 McClatchy Newspapers

18 Comments so far
Show AllPeople's desire to live in peace counts for nothing against the necessity of the owners & bankers to continue to accumulate wealth by building war machines.
It looks as if the old Czech rulers had the old pro-Western dissidents in exactly the right place. Once free, they weren't interested in the least in promoting democracy, but in getting all the perks & privileges of obedient managers of capital.
Definitely NOT a situation that the first Czech President, Thomas Masaryk, had in mind.
This is just another example of Bush administration imperialism looking to establish outposts around the world. It has little to do with "protecting" Europe and much more to do with "controlling" it.
Wouldn't it be nice if all these elaborate plans and profitable contracts would be beneficial or at least benign?
If by some miracle this system ever intercepted a nuclear missile what would happen to the explosive and nuclear material on board?
I bet it is a top secret magic system that turns all the destroyed nukes into organic flower petals.
Anyone diabolical enough to launch a missile would launch hundreds or thousands of real and fake nuclear missiles to overcome the system.
How much radiation can you stand?
Perhaps Russia should deploy a 'missile defence' system in Cuba to help counter the North Korean nuclear threat.
"It's a defense system that doesn't yet work intended to stop a threat that does not yet exist."
Iran neither has an atom bomb nor a delivery system to reach Poland or Czech Republic. In claiming that the missile defense is intended to counter the imagined Iranian offensive, Bush is insulting the intelligence of the world community.
Can anybody then justify why is Bush doing it? This not only will not protect Europe, but will also expose it to nuclear-tipped Russian missiles, which Putin has said now will be aimed at Europe. In the absence of strong objections by the EU, perhaps they already know that the so-called missile defense system is just some satellite equipment for spying on Russia.
Missiles cant defend against bullets, mortars, cannons, tanks, planes, ships etc. They are first strike weapons and the radar system the US wants to set up is a key element assisting our ability to strike first. Read Chomsky's article Letter to Jan Tamas at http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionIdItem=51&ItemID=13154. Russia sees this as a very very serious provocation.
Most anyone who can set aside their ideological biases and use their brains, and look at a map of eastern Europe, and study East and Central European history a bit, can see that missiles in Eastern Europe do NOTHING to stop threats from nations where terrorism is emanating.
It is very clear that Bush, like his father, is afraid of Russia's potential, and is seeking to squash Russia... interestingly a main objective of the Nazis, friends if Prescott Bush. One more element of the Bush family legacy carried out by the mindless offspring.
The offer to have bases in Azerbaijan (as proposed by Putin) makes FAR more sense for terrorist control, as it is nearer the trained religious fanatics in the Middle East, and nearer North Korea (as though tiny North Korea is capable of doing much of anything to anyone else unless provoked into self-defense or retaliation).
BushCheneyRumsfled just want to pick up where the Nazis left off and destroy or invade Russia, and the Russians know it... they have seen this movie before. And so have most Poles and Czechs who see no reason to get caught in the crossfire in wars between the superpowers.
Many Czechs and Poles remember the mass murder and destruction of World War 2 and World War 1, where in every case they was just people wanting peace but caught in wars between the bullies.
BushCheneyRumsfled should just admit that they want confrontation with Russia, and quit lying about their desire to 'cooperate' with Russia in the same what that Hitler did in the duplicitous Hitler-Stalin 'Pact'. Europeans know what Bush is up to... it is only Americans who know nothing about European history who believe Bush's filthy LIES.
Magnus Ranstorp is right on! What a ridiculous imperialistic move on the Administration's part. Now is the time for the House nd Senatem to rise up and refuse to provide ANY funding for the stupid missile defense shield - - a system that doesn't work for a threat that doesn't exist. Send that Cheney/Bush crew packing!
Magnus Ranstorp is right on! What a ridiculous, imperialistic move on the Administration's part. Now is the time for the House and the Senate to rise up and efuse to provide ANY funding for the stupid missile defense shield - - "a system that doesn't work for a threat that doesn't exist," and on aother country's sovreign territory. Send the Cheney/Bush regime packing!
Magnus Ranstorp is right on! What a ridiculous, imperialstic move on the Administration's part. Now is the time for the House and the Senate to rise up and refuse to provide ANY funding for the stupid missile defense shield - -"a system that doesn't work for a threat that doesn't exist," and on another country's sovreign territory, no less. Send the Cheney/Bush regime packing!
What on Earth is wrong with you people? You talking mean like that about our President!
We have a great president, who was not only a graduate of Yale University, he was a USAF fighter pilot, who comes from a prestigious family. He went into civilian life after a distinguished military career durng the Vietnam conflict and started his own business in stocks and bonds and oil development. Our minister told us about it.
President Bush was a strong supporter of our nations national sport too, baseball. Someday he might rank right up there with men like Ty Cobb, Walter Johnson, Christy Mathewson and even Victory faust. Mr. Bush was the governor of Texas in case you've forgotten. The people down there are so proud of him and like him so much, they've nick-named him, "little Shrub". Those Texans must have a great sense of humor.
So when President Bush tells us we need a missile defense system in a foreign country, we should support him. He reads the top secret, crypto intelligence data that we never see. We probably never will either. Now he has that Mr. Putin, the top man in Russia here for a visit at his home in Maine. It was fully covered by Fox news today. I saw it too; now there is a pair to admire.
"What we don't know___won't hurt us", my dad used to tell me, and my dad was smart too. well, probably not as smart as our president. He also told me, "If you live in a shit house__ you'll smell like shit". Well by golly, I went to one of the rallys for Bush and his swell VP Mr. Cheney and got to shake both of their hands. You know what? They both smelled like shit. Funny, you'd think they would be able to afford better quarters; but, my dad told me that those poor politicans don't get paid what they're worth and they live off of handouts. Ain't that sonething?
I was going to add a important sentence, but now I forgot what it was.
The Soviets were right. The US did intend to militarily occupy Eastern Europe.
But what is more important to the capitalist, in the US, the Czech Republic and elsewhere, is that surplus value be stolen and perpetually squandered on arms races. Then they cry poverty when it comes to funding Health Care, education and environmental clean-up.
It's remarkable how well this system works for them.
Good to cee I half compane.
Evelyn Smith,
Escuse me, I thinks you a little not tell true Becase if bush go yale how come he no can speaking English more gooder than I? Maybe posisbl he playing hooki same as him not go report nashenal gurd?
I remember now, it was Charles "Victory" Faust, he pitched the Giants to two pennants during his two year career. Sadly, he died before the start of the next season. There is a good story about him on the internet.