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'We are not destined to be antagonists'
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US President Barack Obama, working to drastically reshape relations with a skeptical Russia, said yesterday that the two countries are not "destined to be antagonists".

"The pursuit of power is no longer a zero-sum game," Obama said, speaking in the Russian capital to graduates of the New Economic School but also hoping to reach the whole nation. "Progress must be shared."

Obama used his speech to further define his view of the United States' place in the world and, specifically, to argue that his country shares compelling interests with Russia.

"Let me be clear: America wants a strong, peaceful and prosperous Russia," he declared.

His upbeat comments came on the second day of his summit in Russia, where polls show people are wary of the United States and taking a skeptical look at Obama himself.

Chinese experts said Obama delivered a clear message to Russia: That the US hopes to establish a relationship beyond the Cold War.

"This is consistent with what Obama has advocated a change from the Bush administration's unilateralism," said Fu Mengzi, a senior researcher on American studies at the China Institute of Contemporary International Relations. But Fu said he believes the two countries have a long way to go before becoming trusting partners.

By emphasizing the sovereignty of Georgia and Ukraine, Obama intended to remind, or even warn, Moscow that the two countries have the right to make their own choices in security and diplomacy.

"He also implied that Russia has to be realistic, that the old era of the Soviet empire is over," Fu said.

Earlier in the day, Obama held private breakfast talks with Prime Minister Vladimir Putin at Putin's country home outside Moscow. The atmosphere seemed cordial, and both voiced hope for improved relations between Washington and Moscow.

Before leaving for Russia, Obama said Putin "has one foot in the old ways of doing business and one foot in the new".

But after his meeting with the Russian leader, a senior administration official said Obama is "very convinced that the prime minister is a man of today and he's got his eyes firmly on the future".

In his speech, Obama said the interests of Russia and the United States generally coincide in five key areas: Halting the spread of nuclear weapons, confronting violent extremists, ensuring economic prosperity, advancing the rights of people and fostering cooperation without jeopardizing sovereignty.

But he also sprinkled in challenges to Russia on its own soil, particularly in the area of democracy.

"By no means is America perfect," Obama said. But he also said: "Independent media have exposed corruption at all levels of business and government. Competitive elections allow us to change course ... If our democracy did not advance those rights, I, as a person of African ancestry, wouldn't be able to address you as an American citizen, much less a president."

Obama said the US will not try to impose any kind of government on another country. But he argued for democratic values "because they are moral, and also because they work". On Georgia and Ukraine two nations that have sought NATO membership to the chagrin of neighboring Russia Obama tried a diplomatic touch. He defended the steps nations must take to join the alliance, adding: "NATO seeks collaboration with Russia, not confrontation."

"There is the 20th century view that the United States and Russia are destined to be antagonists, and that a strong Russia or a strong America can only assert themselves in opposition to one another," Obama said. He dismissed that as inaccurate.

(China Daily July 8, 2009)

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