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  • Ukraine to join Nato?

    Ukraine to join Nato?

    Aljazeera.net, Qatar
    Tuesday 05 April 2005, 3:57 Makka Time, 0:57 GMT

    US President George Bush has said he supports the idea of Ukraine
    becoming a member of Nato, but said the eastern European state still
    had not met the requirements to enter.


    Speaking at White House news conference with Ukrainian President
    Viktor Yushchenko, Bush said membership in Nato "is not a given".

    "In other words, there are things that the Ukrainian government must
    do in order to satisfy the requirements to be considered for Nato."

    Ukraine's hopes of joining the alliance soon are hurt by the state
    of its military, which is seen as underfunded and at times incompetent.

    Nato members are also wary of antagonising Russia, which could fear
    losing its naval base in the Ukrainian port of Sevastopol.

    Bush noted that Ukraine also wants to join the European Union and
    said "you don't have to choose between the EU and friendship with
    the United States".

    Yushchenko said his country was looking forward to US support in
    accession to European and Euro-Atlantic security alliances.

    Anti-Nato alliance?

    Meanwhile, senior officials from three splinter territories in old
    Soviet Union countries said on Monday they were ready for closer
    military cooperation in the face of pro-Western revolutions in Ukraine
    and Georgia.

    "The revolutions in Georgia and Ukraine have created a new geopolitical
    situation," said Valeri Litskaya, external relations chief for
    Moldova's Russian-speaking separatist republic of Transdniestr.

    Litskaya said he feared "growing pressure" on the secessionist
    republics by Georgia and Moldova, which form part of a regional
    association that also includes Ukraine and Azerbaijan.

    "We have common interests, common threats and a historic common
    destiny that pushes us to come together and unite," said Sergei Chamba,
    external affairs head of Georgia's breakaway region of Abkhazia.

    Russian enclaves unite

    Litskaya said a meeting of leaders from the breakway territories and
    from the Armenian enclave of Nagorno Karabakh would meet in Abkhazia's
    main city of Sukhumi later this month.

    Chamba said that in preparing for the meeting, "we discussed the
    possibility of cooperating in the military domain".

    The president of Georgia's separatist region of South Ossetia, Dmitri
    Medoyev, said that if his region is attacked, it would count in support
    from "brother peoples" in North Ossetia, Transdniestr and Abkhazia.

    AFP
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