INTRODUCTORY REMARKS Helle Dale Deputy Director,
Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies, and Director,
Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies,
The Heritage Foundation
PANEL 1 Fritz Ermarth Former Chairman,
National Intelligence Council
and former Senior Director,
USSR/Russia,
National Security Council
Irina Yasina, Ph.D. Director,
Regional Journalism Club (via satellite)
Baker Spring F.M. Kirby Research Fellow in National Security Policy,
The Heritage Foundation
Col. (Ret.) Alexander Sharavin– invited
Director,
Institute for Political and Military Analysis (via satellite)
Moderator Ariel Cohen, Ph.D. Senior Research Fellow,
Russian and Eurasian Studies and International Energy Security, The Heritage Foundation
PANEL 2 Yevgeny Volk, Ph.D. Coordinator,
Moscow Office,
The Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies,
The Heritage Foundation (via satellite)
Janusz Bugajski Director,
New European Democracies Project Senior Fellow,
Europe Program,
Center for Strategic and International Studies
Sanford M. Saunders, Jr. Partner,
Greenberg/Traurig
Moderator Peter Brookes Senior Fellow for National Security Affairs,
Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies,
The Heritage Foundation
CLOSING REMARKS Ariel Cohen, Ph.D. Senior Research Fellow,
Russian and Eurasian Studies and International Energy Security,
Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies,
The Heritage Foundation
Host(s):
The Heritage Foundation
Details:
President Barack Obama will visit Russia on July 6-8, 2009, to meet with Russian President Dmitri Medvedev. Arms control will be at the top of the agenda as the two countries have pledged to draft a new treaty to replace the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) that expires in December. The new agreement will set the stage for further cuts and serve as a stepping stone to including all nuclear weapons states in the future. The two presidents will explore cooperation over Afghanistan – the only area where the two sides have a fundamental agreement, despite Russian pressure to force the U.S. Air Force from the Manas Air base in Kyrgyzstan.
Moscow continues to demand the revision of the global economic and security architectures, including development of global or regional reserve currencies, the halt of NATO enlargement to Ukraine and Georgia, and putting in check U.S. and European relations with Russia’s ex-Soviet neighborhood. Meanwhile, the Russian leadership is struggling in the face of a grave financial crisis, with no end in sight.
The Obama Administration has hinted at a “grand bargain” with Moscow that would involve the scaling back of U.S. European missile defense deployment in exchange for Russian cooperation on Iran. Recently, Russia has released a new national security strategy that posits continual confrontation with the United States and NATO. What are America’s strategic objectives in the arms control talks with Russia? Will President Obama ignore the deeper issues at stake in Russia’s business relations, such as the rule of law?
Join us for a discussion on the upcoming summit and U.S.-Russia bilateral relations. In addition to our panel of U.S.-based experts, the view from Moscow will be delivered by prominent analysts of Russian affairs via satellite link.