Word: kampelman
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...Konstantin Chernenko. Once the Americans showed up, the four negotiators and their interpreters sat down and talked, behind closed doors, for two hours and 45 minutes. They agreed on at least one point: it would be best not to discuss with reporters anything consequential from preliminary sessions. "Therefore," Kampelman said at a press conference, "I will be unable to answer your questions...
Glitman and Obukhov will be the point men on intermediate-range nuclear forces (INF) negotiations, which deal mostly with weapons deployed in Europe. Tower and Karpov will square off over intercontinental ballistic missiles in the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks. Kvitsinsky and Kampelman will confront each other on the touchiest issue in the negotiations, space weapons. The Soviets hope to knock out President Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative, better known as Star Wars, while it is still in the research stage. The overall American posture, by contrast, is to reduce existing offensive weapons and worry at a later date about placing...
...which the Soviets have fervently encouraged, staged small, mostly discreet demonstrations across the street from the Soviet mission; a handful of Americans joined them. Dissent was far more evident in Belgium, which has been debating whether to deploy U.S. cruise missiles. To ensure that the basing plan went ahead, Kampelman, Tower and Glitman lobbied Prime Minister Wilfried Martens during a day trip to Brussels on Monday. On Friday, Martens announced Belgium would proceed because an accord on limiting INF missiles would be "impossible in the short term"; hours later, the first cruises arrived in the country...
...Kampelman and his colleagues also had to contend with the scrutiny of ten visiting U.S. Senators and eight Congressmen, all of whom had to be briefed regularly. Said Senate Minority Leader Robert Byrd, one of the group: "If a treaty should emerge, we in the Senate would need to have more than a cursory knowledge of it." Although Kampelman & Co. readily offered backgrounding, they fear that leaks, misstatements and well-meant meddling by the lawmakers could disrupt the talks...
...opening of their session. The U.S., by contrast, herded cameramen out with a loud countdown of "five . . . four . . . three . . . two . . . one." Glitman turned to Karpov and said with a grin, "It's a good thing they didn't say 'blast off.' " At the same session, Kampelman gestured to photographers and said to Karpov, "Maybe we should shake hands," then leaned across the table to do so. Added Kampelman: "They're working people. We have to sympathize." Still, it was Karpov who got off the deftest line, one that went to the heart of the basic political question underlying...