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This is an archive article published on October 28, 2007

Putin likens US missile dispute to Cuban crisis

Russian President Vladimir Putin likened a dispute with Washington over defence to the Cuban missile crisis of 1962...

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Russian President Vladimir Putin likened a dispute with Washington over defence to the Cuban missile crisis of 1962 but said the same Cold War tensions could not be repeated.

“Let me remind you what happened in the same situation in the 1960s. When the Soviet Union deployed missiles in Cuba, it led to the Caribbean crisis,” Putin said on Friday, using the Russian term for the Cuban missile crisis. “Thank God, there is no Caribbean crisis now, mainly because Russia’s relations with the European Union and the United States have changed a lot” since the Cold War, he added. But he said that Washington was creating “threats” near Russia’s borders.

Putin was speaking at a press conference after meeting EU leaders at a summit in the Portuguese town of Mafra.

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The US has outlined plans to locate interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar in the Czech Republic in order to guard against possible missile attacks from Iran.

Moscow has reacted angrily to the plans, saying the missile defence system is actually aimed at Russia.

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