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Georgia opens new military base to be built to NATO standards

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  • Georgia opens new military base to be built to NATO standards

    Georgia opens new military base to be built to NATO standards
    By MISHA DZHINDZHIKHASHVILI

    AP Worldstream
    Apr 06, 2005

    President Mikhail Saakashvili inaugurated a new military base in
    western Georgia on Wednesday, a base built to NATO standards to advance
    the Caucasus nation's efforts of joining the trans-Atlantic alliance.

    The US$4.8 million (Aâ~B¬3.73 million) base, built about 280
    kilometers (170 miles) west of the capital, Tbilisi, will be able to
    house up to 3,000 military personnel for training maneuvers and will
    have modern facilities, defense officials said.

    "This will be a base that meets all European standards," Saakashvili
    said at a ground breaking ceremony. Defense officials gave no other
    details.

    The base is located 80 kilometers (50 miles) from the border with
    Abkhazia, which has had de facto independence since breaking away
    from the central government in a war in the 1990s.

    Saakashvili, a Western-trained, former opposition leader who was
    vaulted to the presidency in a popular uprising known as the Rose
    Revolution, has said membership with NATO _ and the European Union _
    is a goal of the Caucasus nation. The United States is spending US$50
    million to help train four battalions of Georgian servicemen to be
    used in international peacekeeping operations.

    The announcement comes as Georgia and Russia spar over the withdrawal
    of two Russian bases left over from the Soviet Union.

    Russia has said it needs at least three years, perhaps even a
    decade, to complete the pullout and also is demanding millions
    in compensation. Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov said last
    month the cost of withdrawing would be as much as US$300 million
    (Aâ~B¬234 million).

    Russian observers have said that Moscow is concerned that pulling out
    all its forces from Georgia could jeopardize its base in neighboring
    Armenia, one of Moscow's closest allies in the region.

    Armenia does not share a border with Russia, and all Russian equipment
    and personnel have to transit Georgian territory to get there.

    --Boundary_(ID_DGkA5guHZ8CebKmuZwLKvQ)--
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