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MISSILE DEFENSE
Romania minister under fire over 'ballistic' gaffe
by Staff Writers
Bucharest (AFP) Aug 1, 2018

Romania's defence minister on Wednesday faced calls to resign after he said the US missile defence system in the south had ballistic missiles, apparently confirming Russian concerns of a security threat near its border.

"How could president (Vladimir) Putin be thrilled that we have the military base at Deveselu with ballistic missiles", Mihai Fifor said Tuesday during a live interview with a local television station.

Fifor later blamed "a misunderstanding or an error of communication".

"No one could ever say that there are ballistic missiles at Deveselu. I said that the base is a defence against ballistic missiles, not that it has any of them," Fifor told another news channel.

Russia sees the missile shield as a security threat on its doorstep, despite the US and NATO insisting it is not aimed at undermining Moscow's defences.

According to NATO, the shield is a purely defensive system equipped with interceptors, which can protect NATO members against short- and medium-range ballistic missiles.

Romania's main opposition parties, the National Liberal Party and the Save Romania Union, have called on Fifor to quit. Former president Traian Basescu of the People's Movement Party also condemned Fifor.

"Mihai Fifor has no place in the government... He confirmed statements made by Putin and other officials who try to undermine the reality, which is that Deveselu is a defensive missile system, not on offensive one," Basescu wrote on Facebook.

Fifor's comments follow two other gaffes.

Prime Minister Viorica Dancila declared last week she was "happy to be in Pristina" while visiting Montenegro's capital Podgorica. Pristina is the capital of Kosovo, which Romania does not recognise.

And Romania's agriculture minister apologised last week for having compared the incineration of dead pigs infected with African swine fever to the Auschwitz concentration camp.

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MISSILE DEFENSE
Japan to spend $4.2 bn over 30 years on missile defence system radar
Tokyo (AFP) July 30, 2018
Japan said Monday it would spend some $4.2 billion over the next 30 years on installing and operating US radar systems to protect itself against North Korean missile threats. The move, announced by Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera, is the latest step by Tokyo to upgrade its military. Japan says the North's nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles pose a direct threat. US firm Lockheed Martin has offered to build the radars needed for a new ground-based Aegis Ashore missile defence system at a cos ... read more

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