Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Russian foreign minister shrugs off dispute over bases in Georgia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Russian foreign minister shrugs off dispute over bases in Georgia

    Russian foreign minister shrugs off dispute over bases in Georgia
    By STEVE GUTTERMAN; Associated Press Writer

    Associated Press Worldstream
    March 11, 2005 Friday 3:46 PM Eastern Time

    MOSCOW -- Russia's foreign minister shrugged off a push by Georgia's
    parliament for a deadline for a Russian military withdrawal, saying
    Friday that the dispute must be resolved through negotiations and
    pledging to step up the talks.

    Georgia's President Mikhail Saakashvili, too, voiced hope for a
    compromise that would help warm up often-tense relations between his
    Caucasus nation and its giant northern neighbor.

    Georgian lawmakers voted Thursday to call on their government to demand
    that Russia close the bases by the beginning of next year if the two
    ex-Soviet republics fail to agree on a timetable for the withdrawal
    by May 15.

    The unanimous resolution raised the stakes in the dispute over the
    bases - hangovers from the Soviet era that helped sour relations
    between Russia and Georgia, whose new Western-oriented leadership is
    trying to shed Moscow's influence.

    Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Friday that during a visit to
    Georgia last month, "We agreed to use the next two months to try to
    activate the negotiation process" on unresolved disputes including
    the bases.

    "This agreement stands," Lavrov said. He said talks would be held
    "in the near future."

    Lavrov stressed that Russia's contact on the issue was not with
    Georgia's parliament but its executive branch.

    Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili's administration had pressured
    lawmakers Wednesday to withdraw the resolution.

    Saakashvili said late Friday that despite the parliament's "sharp"
    move, talks continued.

    "I don't lose hope that we can reach a civilized agreement that
    wouldn't infringe on Russia's interests while respecting independence
    and sovereignty of Georgia," he told reporters in the Georgian capital,
    Tbilisi. "There is a hope that solving this issue could become a
    victory for Georgian and Russian diplomacy and take our relations to
    a new level."

    Lavrov declined to comment on Russia's position on a timetable for
    the withdrawal, but a senior Russian Defense Ministry official said
    Thursday that the bases could be closed within three to four years,
    rather than 11 or more as stated previously. The head of the foreign
    affairs committee in Georgia's parliament suggested it should be no
    longer than two years.

    The Georgian parliament's nonbinding resolution said that if Moscow
    does not comply with withdrawal demands, the bases - at Batumi and
    Akhalkalaki - should be forced out by refusing to issue visas to
    Russian military personnel and limiting the movement of troops and
    materiel in Georgia.

    Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Yakovenko assailed
    Georgia on Friday over a delay in issuing visa to the new commander
    of Russian forces in Georgia, saying that "solving this and other
    issues exacerbating conditions for the Russian military in Georgia
    would help creat favorable conditions for talks."

    Nationalist Russian lawmaker Konstantin Zatulin told the newspaper
    Nezavisimaya Gazeta that if Georgia tries to force the pullout,
    Moscow should raise its prices for gas and oil deliveries in
    retaliation. Georgia relies heavily on Russia for energy supplies.

    The Russian daily Kommersant said Moscow fears its military presence
    in Armenia - its closest ally in the strategic Caucasus region -
    could be at risk if it pulls out of Georgia.

    Russia does not border Armenia, and uses Georgian territory to move
    troops and equipment to its military base there.
Working...
X