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Czech President Says Freedoms Endangered, Not Climate

Czech President Vaclav Klaus says individual freedoms are more endangered than the climate. In a wide-ranging interview with RFE/RL, Klaus took aim at one of his favorite recent targets -- those calling for urgent action on global warming.

Klaus said some environmentalists were peddling a lie that there was a scientific consensus on the extent of man's impact on rising global temperatures and their consequences.

He said that "small" climate changes were being used to support far-reaching measures that would harm economic activity and human freedoms.

In the interview, Klaus also said opposition to a planned U.S. base near Prague must be respected, and that it was up to politicians to explain to the Czech public why they should play host.

Washington wants to place a radar station in the Czech Republic as part of a missile-defense system it says is aimed at countering potential threats from countries like Iran.

But polls show some two-thirds of Czechs oppose the plan.

Klaus said that was in part because people did not feel a clear enough threat, and that they weren't getting a sufficient explanation from politicians.

On what postcommunist members of the European Union could -- or should -- do to help democracy movements further east, Klaus said the idea of exporting democracy or revolutions was a "fantasy" that mostly ended badly.

And on the EU, Klaus affirmed his position as an outspoken critic of closer integration. He said he advocated further EU expansion because the more members if has "the weaker the power of Brussels will be."

Copyright (c) 2006. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org

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