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Nuuk (AFP) August 21, 2000 - A senior US official suggested Monday that the United States could make a decision on the controversial national missile defence (NMD) shield within a week. John Holum, Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security Affairs, told Danish DR1 television that discussions on the missile shield were ongoing but that understanding on the system from Greenland was also vital. "A decision concerning NMD can be taken within a week or so ..." Holum said. In Washington, White House spokesman PJ Crowley said that President Bill Clinton "awaits a report from the secretary of defence, and that has not occurred yet," referring to a recommendation on the project expected from Defence Secretary William Cohen. "The secretary has indicated that he will take his time," Crowley said. Another senior US State Department official set September 21 as a possible date for a decision. A US radar base at Thule, northwest Greenland, was set up in 1951. It would provide a key link in the NMD plan, but would require substantial modernisation and development. Denmark handles foreign policy and defence matters for Greenland. Holum is heading a US foreign affairs and defence delegation which arrived here Monday to brief local officials on plans to upgrade the airbase in line with the proposed NMD. "We are not asking Greenland to make a decision at this stage. We are engaged as you know in discussions with the Russians... all we are looking for is their understanding," Holum said on television. "Once a decision is made, we would engage actively with the Danish government and certainly we will continue to explain our position to Greenland," he added. The US team accompanied by their Danish counterparts, was received early Tuesday by Greenland's Prime Minister Jonathan Motzfeldt and other officials. On Sunday, the prime minister had told a press conference that Greenland had informed Copenhagen and Washington that "his government would not accept a modernisation of the Thule air base if it resulted in increased tension and world destabilisation." "We will welcome the Americans, but we will also express our fears that such plans risk destabilising our Arctic region, but equally the world where we live," Motzfeldt added. The US delegation will leave Nuuk early Wednesday for a 24-hour stop in Thule before flying on to Copenhagen the following day. Many Greenland officials oppose the US missile scheme as violating the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty. Washington hopes to be able to amend the treaty if it decides to go ahead with the nuclear missile shield. China and Russia are both firm opponents of the scheme, which they warn could reignite the arms race and increase instability in the arctic region and throughout the world. The Danish government, responsible as it is for Greenland's foreign affairs, security and defence, has not yet taken a position on the NMD project, awaiting concrete initiatives from the US side on the Thule base. The 1951 agreement on Thule allows the United States to modernise its military base there without agreement from Denmark or Greenland, Danish television reported.
Copyright 2000 AFP. All rights reserved. The material on this page is provided by AFP and may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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