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Putin accuses US of bid to impose will on world

In one of his harshest attacks on the US in seven years in power, the Russian President accused Washington of attempting to force its will on the world.

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MUNICH: Russian President Vladimir Putin, in one of his harshest attacks on the United States in seven years in power, accused Washington on Saturday of attempting to force its will on the world.   

In a speech in Germany, that one US senator said smacked of Cold War rhetoric, Putin accused the United States of making the world a more dangerous place by pursuing policies aimed at making it "one single master".   

Attacking the concept of a "unipolar" world in which the United States was the sole superpower, he said: "What is a unipolar world? No matter how we beautify this term it means one single centre of power, one single centre of force and one single master."   

"It has nothing in common with democracy because that is the opinion of the majority taking into account the minority opinion," he told the gathering of top security and defence officials.   

"People are always teaching us democracy but the people who teach us democracy don't want to learn it themselves," he said.   

The Kremlin has for several weeks been dropping hints that Putin, who steps down next year after two terms in power, was preparing a major foreign policy speech that would point the way for his successor.   

Its delivery at the prestigious annual Munich meeting on security was clearly aimed at attracting maximum attention.   

"The message I got from his speech was that Putin wants Russia to have the same position in the world as the former Soviet Union," a senior European official said.   

Putin spoke against a background of increasing Russian agitation over US policy on Iraq, and on the Iran and North Korea nuclear issues, as well as growing self-confidence as an emerging energy superpower.   

US plans to deploy parts of an anti-missile defence system in Poland and the Czech Republic have become a fresh irritant in US-Russian relations. Washington says the system is needed for defence against rockets launched by Iran and North Korea -- an argument rejected by Moscow.   

Putin said the United States had repeatedly overstepped its national borders in questions of international security, a policy that he said had made the world less, not more, safe.   

"Unilateral actions have not resolved conflicts but have made them worse," Putin said, adding that force should only be used when backed by the United Nations Security Council.   

"This is very dangerous. Nobody feels secure any more because nobody can hide behind international law," he said.   

Putin also said the increased use of force was "causing an arms race with the desire of countries to get nuclear weapons". He did not name the countries.   

Putin mentioned no specific conflicts. But he has been very critical of the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, where US soldiers are still struggling to crush an insurgency.   

New US Defence Secretary Robert Gates, the top US official at the conference, said Putin's comments were "interesting, very forthright".   

US Senator Joseph Lieberman said the speech was provocative and marked by "rhetoric that sounded more like the Cold War". Republican Senator Lindsey Graham dismissed it as  "long on bravado and short on realism".       

NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said he was disappointed by Putin's statement that alliance enlargement was "a serious factor provoking reduced mutual trust".   

"I see a disconnection between NATO's partnership with Russia as it has developed and Putin's speech," he said.   

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, however, denied the Russian president was trying to provoke Washington. "This is not about confrontation. It's an invitation to think," he told reporters.   

Though Russia is frequently at odds with the United States on a wide range of policy issues, Putin has generally avoided direct criticism of Washington and makes no secret of his personal friendship with US President George W. Bush.   

He restated this on Saturday, saying Bush was a "decent man" and a friend. "He is criticised for everything he does but he is a decent man. He says Russia and the US will never be enemies and I agree with him," he said in answer to a question.   

Putin also called on European states, many of which have disagreed with US policy in Iraq and elsewhere, to be more active in international affairs. 

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