(Adds EU's Frattini saying full EU visa deal with US possible this year)
By Huw Jones
STRASBOURG, France, March 11 (Reuters) - Estonia will ignore protests from the European Commission and sign a bilateral visa and air security deal with the United States on Wednesday, the Baltic republic's president said.
Fellow Baltic state Latvia is also due to sign an agreement on Wednesday, its Foreign Ministry said, adding to a row between the European Union executive and some new member states keen to get visa-free treatment in the United States.
Estonian President Toomas Hendrik Ilves said his country had kept Brussels informed throughout its talks with Washington.
"Estonia, which will sign a memorandum of understanding tomorrow, has been pursuing this for four years and has kept the European Commission informed at all times about what we are doing," Ilves said on Tuesday.
"The Commission only now has decided to say something ... No one seemed to care during this process," he told reporters during a visit to the European Parliament.
"To continue this line of thought, it occasionally strikes me as odd that countries that have visa waiver programmes, and have had them for decades, should suddenly say you can't have one," Ilves continued.
Latvia's Foreign Ministry said in a statement that its aim was to end inequalities in the treatment of EU citizens travelling to the United States.
Most EU states are already part of a U.S. visa waiver programme which allows people to travel without visas, but not 11 of the 12 mostly ex-communist countries that joined the bloc in 2004 and 2007, or older member Greece.
The Commission, which has already tried to press the United States to grant visa-free access to all 27 EU states, was due to ask member governments on Tuesday for a mandate to act as sole negotiator on securing visa-free access to the United States.
European Justice and Security Commissioner Franco Frattini said on Tuesday he hoped talks with the United States could move fast enough to allow for political endorsement of a visa waiver programme for all 27 EU states at an EU-U.S. summit in June and its implementation by the end of 2008.
His attempts to keep the negotiations as the exclusive competence of Brussels have been undermined by new members of the bloc agreeing to do bilateral deals.
The Czech Republic angered the Commission and some older member states last month when it signed a deal to make it easier for Czechs to travel to the United States visa-free in exchange for enhanced air security cooperation.
Hungary is expected to do the same later this month.
Countries signing bilateral pacts do not get immediate visa-free status, but Washington will make access easier when they fulfill a number of security criteria.
For the Czech Republic, these include more cooperation on passport and airport security and armed sky marshals.
U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff is due to sign the visa and air security deals with Estonia and Latvia on Wednesday, a day before before he meets Frattini and other senior EU officials for talks in Slovenia. (Additional reporting by Patrick Lannin in Riga; Writing by William Schomberg in Brussels; Editing by Catherine Evans)