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 Today's | Russia, China pledge unity By Christopher Bodeen, Associated Press 
      writer  BEIJING 
      -- In a throwback to the early years of the Cold War, China and Russia 
      joined yesterday to condemn what they consider U.S. attempts to dominate 
      the global order and pledged to stand together in defiance of American 
      power.  Russian 
      President Vladimir Putin and his Chinese counterpart, Jiang Zemin, put 
      their burgeoning partnership on display during a one-day summit in the 
      Chinese capital. Among the five documents they and their aides signed at a 
      public ceremony, two took aim at the United States, singling out the 
      proposed national missile defense system.  The leaders' language was not 
      confrontational, but they agreed to closer cooperation on international 
      affairs and denounced the anti-missile shield. In a joint statement, they 
      accused Washington of using the shield "to seek unilateral military and 
      security advantages that will pose the most grave, adverse consequences" 
      to China, Russia and the United States itself.  Putin and Jiang urged 
      Washington to adhere to the 28-year-old Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, 
      which prohibits the missile defense system. Their statement warned that 
      altering the treaty "will trigger an arms race and lead to an about-face 
      in the positive trend that appeared in world politics after the end of the 
      Cold War."  Washington 
      argues that its proposed national shield is not aimed at China and Russia 
      but at stopping missiles from North Korea and other smaller states hostile 
      to U.S. interests. Putin and Jiang said "the pretext of a missile threat 
      is totally unjustified."  They also criticized a U.S. 
      proposal for a more limited anti-missile system to protect its troops and 
      allies in East Asia, which Beijing fears would undermine its claim to 
      Taiwan.  Defense 
      Secretary William Cohen met with Jiang and other top Chinese officials in 
      Beijing last week but reported making little headway in overcoming their 
      objections to missile defense.  "The ones that we have to work 
      on most assiduously are the China concerns," Undersecretary of State John 
      D. Holum told reporters in Washington yesterday. "It will take 
      considerable work to demonstrate that this system isn't aimed at them."  In the documents Jiang 
      and Putin signed after almost three hours of closed-door meetings, they 
      blasted "hegemonism" and attempts to interfere in countries' internal 
      affairs. Those were thinly veiled attacks on NATO, U.S. bullying and last 
      year's war on Yugoslavia, all of which have been roundly criticized in the 
      past by the giant neighbors.  Jiang and Putin also issued a 
      separate statement committing China and Russia to "work together in the 
      international arena to promote peace and stability in the world." Their 
      aides signed agreements on banking and energy cooperation. One accord will 
      see Russia build an experimental fast neutron reactor in China. 
      Yesterday's meeting was Jiang and Putin's second in three weeks, after a 
      Central Asian summit.  After a 21-gun salute, Jiang squired Putin along a red carpet to review a 
      military honor guard on Tiananmen Square. The presidents then met 
      privately for two hours before their foreign and defense ministers and 
      other officials joined them for formal talks.  Afterward, Jiang and Putin said 
      their talks cemented already strong ties. Putin invited Jiang to visit 
      Moscow next year.  The 
      common stance was a reminder of the 1950s, when Mao Tse-tung's regime was 
      Russia's "little brother" in the communist camp. They worked then to 
      spread communism and fight what they labeled U.S. imperialism. | 
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