Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, September 27, 1990, Page 16, Image 16

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INTERNATIONAL
East-West talks hint at proaress
NEW YORK (AP) - The United States and the
Soviet Union were unable Wednesday to iron out
their differences on unfinished treaties to reduce
conventional and long-range nuclear weapons.
But the Soviets, hinted at progress and anoth
er round of high-level talks was set tentatively for
Thursday afternoon.
Failure to reach agreement on the accords
could force postponement of a 34-nation summit
meeting in Paris in mid-November, interrupt the
easing of East-West tensions in Europe and delay
a trip to Moscow in December by President Bush.
The pivotal talks were held by Secretary of
State (antes A. Baker 111 and Soviet Foreign Min
ister Eduard A. Shevardnadze in a mid-town ho
tel about a mile from the United Nations where
they voted on Tuesday to impose an embargo on
cargo shipments by air to Iraq and occupied Ku
wait.
The aim is to force Iraq to withdraw from the
oil-rich emirate in the Persian Gulf, which it
seized Aug. 2. sending tremors through world oil
markets and touching off hoarding and price
rises.
"On quite a few questions there is progress,"
Shevardnadze said at the conclusion of the meet
ing. which took nearly four hours. He did not
specify which questions he had in mind.
“But in order to carry these thru to the end
we'll have to meet again," he said
The senior U.S. official who briefed reporters
later under rules that shielded his identity said
Baker and Shevardnadze had recommitted them
selves to completing the two treaties by the end
of the year
He said they "laid out some ideas," which
he declined to describe, and would take them up
again at their second meeting.
Asked if any of the remaining issues had
been resolved, the official replied: "They are still
unsettled."
In a drive to complete the treaties. U S. and
Soviet negotiators met separately from Baker and
Shevardnadze, continuing discussions they be
gan last week in Washington.
The Soviet group is headed by Viktor P. Kar
pov. a deputy prime minister and veteran arms
specialist; and the U.S. delegation by Under Sec
retary of State Reginald Bartholomew.
Shevardnadze suggested a lot of work re
mains to be done. "There are so many prob
lems," he told reporters through a Russian trans
lator.
Baker said they also dealt "a good bit with
cooperation" at the United Nations and added,
"We ran out of time, quite frankly."
At the United Nations the two superpowers
are working in tandem to tighten the economic
screws on Iraq by denying the President Saddam
Hussein's government all trade except for human
itarian food supplies
A senior U.S. official briefing reporters on
condition of anonymity said the Soviets had
backed away from any attempt to link the Persian
Gulf crisis to other area problems such as the
Arab-Israeli dispute and the future of the Israeli
occupied territories.
Also, he said the .Soviets "want to give a new
impetus to the proliferation issue” and agreed to
work more closely with the United States, once
the Gulf crisis is over, to halt the proliferation of
nuclear and chemical warfare technologies in the
region.
Baker began the meeting thanking Shevard
nadze for a strong speech at the United Nations
on Tuesday condemning Saddam and for the way
the Soviet foreign minister chaired the Security
Council session.
Shevardnadze said he was operating under a
"directive" from Soviet President Mikhail S. Gor
bachev to break the deadlock in the negotiations
over reducing non-nuclear arsenals in Europe.
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