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Russian defense minister says at least four years needed to withdraw

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  • Russian defense minister says at least four years needed to withdraw

    Russian defense minister says at least four years needed to withdraw troops from Georgia

    The Associated Press
    05/04/05 03:28 EDT

    MOSCOW (AP) - Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov said in an interview
    published Wednesday that Russia needs at least four years to withdraw
    troops from its two Soviet-era bases in Georgia, a stance likely to
    dismay Tbilisi.

    "The question is not when we start the pullout, but when we finish it,"
    Ivanov told the government daily Rossiskaya Gazeta.

    He said that military experts had calculated that it would take
    "at least four years" to build infrastructure in Russia to house the
    equipment and servicemen being withdrawn from Georgia.

    Last month, after talks with his Georgian counterpart in Moscow,
    Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Moscow could start
    withdrawing troops from the two bases this year.

    The long-simmering dispute over the bases' has strained relations
    between the ex-Soviet republics, relations that have soured further
    since President Mikhail Saakashvili and his pro-Western administration
    came to power in Georgia in 2004.

    Saakashvili is anxious for his impoverished Caucasus mountain nation
    to shake off Russian influence and join Western bodies such as NATO.
    His administration has insisted the withdrawal be completed within
    two years.

    Moscow also is demanding several hundred million dollars (euros)
    in compensation.

    Russian officials say a central concern is accommodating the more
    than 3,000 military personnel who serve on the two bases when they
    return to Russia. Military personnel who returned to Russia following
    the withdrawal of forces from Germany and other European countries
    caused widespread turmoil in the Russian defense establishment, with
    some officers and their families being housed in miserable conditions.

    Observers also say Russia is concerned that pulling out all its forces
    from Georgia could adversely affect its base in neighboring Armenia,
    one of Moscow's closest allies in the region. Russian troops and
    equipment have to transit Georgian territory to get to Armenia.
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