PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC — The Bush administration has told Moscow that it may delay activation of a proposed U.S. missile-defense system in Europe until it has “definitive proof” that Iran poses a missile threat, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Tuesday.
A senior Russian official repeated the Kremlin view that the U.S. misreads Iran’s missile potential. And in Washington, President Bush asserted that a U.S.-linked missile defense system is urgently needed in Europe, illustrating the depth of the divide between former Cold War adversaries.
“We need to take it seriously – now,” Bush said of the possibility Iran will gain the ability to attack Europe.
Bush said intelligence estimates show Iran could have the ability to strike the U.S. and many European allies by 2015. The Americans say the Russian estimate is 2015 to 2020.
Russia has long opposed U.S. missile defenses, which currently are limited to a fledgling system based mainly in Alaska, California and Colorado, on grounds that it might undermine the deterrent value of its nuclear arsenal. More broadly, Moscow worries at steps toward closer U.S.- European security ties.
As for the proposal Gates described Tuesday, the Russians have expressed interest but not agreement.
The Bush administration has been negotiating with Prague and Poland over terms of basing. The Russians have pressed the U.S. to freeze the negotiations, but Gates insisted that won’t happen.



