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Bush Vows to Help Georgia Join NATO, Solve Conflicts (Update3)

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  • Bush Vows to Help Georgia Join NATO, Solve Conflicts (Update3)

    Bloomberg
    May 10 2005

    Bush Vows to Help Georgia Join NATO, Solve Conflicts (Update3)

    May 10 (Bloomberg) -- President George W. Bush promised the U.S. will
    help the former Soviet republic of Georgia gain entry to NATO,
    negotiate the withdrawal of Russian troops and resolve a separatist
    conflict that threatens the emerging democracy.

    In a speech today in Tbilisi, Georgia's capital, Bush told thousands
    of Georgians their peaceful democratic revolution in 2003 ignited a
    ``freedom movement'' in the region and inspired the spread of
    democracy elsewhere in the world.

    ``As you build a free and democratic Georgia, the American people
    will stand with you,'' Bush, the first U.S. president to visit the
    country, said in Tbilisi's Freedom Square. ``By extending freedom to
    those who have not known it, we will advance the cause of freedom and
    we will advance the cause of peace.''

    Bush was making his final stop on a five-day European trip centered
    on helping Russian President Vladimir Putin commemorate the 60th
    anniversary of the victory over Nazi Germany in World War II. He also
    used the journey -- which included stops in Georgia and Latvia, two
    republics of the old Soviet empire -- to reinforce the pledge he made
    at the beginning of the year of uncompromising U.S. support for
    democratic movements.

    The itinerary illustrated the diplomatic balance Bush faces in the
    region in pushing for greater democracy and freedom in the region
    while bolstering relations with Putin, who Bush and members of his
    administration have chided for taking backward steps on reforms.
    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov sent a letter of complaint
    regarding the Latvia and Georgia stops when Bush's schedule was set.

    Inspiration

    Bush held up Georgia as an example of how freedom inspires people the
    world over.

    ``Now, across the Caucasas, in Central Asia and the broader Middle
    East, we see the same desire for liberty burning in the hearts of
    young people,'' Bush told the crowd in Tbilisi. ``They are demanding
    their freedom, and they will have it.''

    Bush used the same theme at his May 7 stop in Riga, Latvia, where he
    also noted that the end of World War II brought the Baltic states a
    new form of oppression under the Soviet Union. The speeches follow
    Bush's challenge to Putin at a February summit in Bratislava,
    Slovakia, on press freedoms and allowing political opposition.

    `In Reverse'

    Democratic progress in Russian has ``not only slowed down I think its
    moving in reverse,'' aid Marshall Goldman of the Davis Center for
    Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard University.

    Although Bush made no speeches while in Moscow, Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice said the president raised his concerns about Putin's
    steps to centralize power and restrict opposition during a private
    meeting with Putin May 8.

    Putin responded to U.S. criticism by giving an interview for the
    CBS's ``60 Minutes'' program in which he cited the disputed vote
    count in Bush's 2000 election to say the U.S. shouldn't be lecturing
    Russia on the subject.

    The stops in Latvia and Georgia helped Bush accomplished some of his
    objectives, said Ariel Cohen, a Russia expert at the Heritage
    Foundation in Washington.

    ``The message to Mr. Putin that the geopolitical reality of the
    former Soviet empire has changed irreversibly was sent loud and
    clear,'' said Ariel Cohen, a Russia expert at the Heritage Foundation
    in Washington.

    Still, there's no evidence Bush made headway with Putin on Russian
    democratic reforms, an issue that has become a central source of
    tension between the two.

    Words and Deeds

    ``Bush has raised his concerns, but there is no sign that Putin is
    intending to do anything,'' said James Goldgeier, a Russia expert at
    the Council on Foreign Relations who worked at the State Department
    and National Security Council under former President Bill Clinton.

    U.S. National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley, briefing reporters in
    Moscow May 8, praised a Putin speech last week in which the Russian
    president extolled the virtues of democracy while saying ``obviously,
    those words have to be translated into deeds.''

    Goldgeier said the mutual interest of the United States and Russia
    will prevent the relationship between the two nations from devolving
    into conflict.

    Among other things, America needs Russia's help with stymieing the
    nuclear ambitions of Iran and North Korea and with nudging Israel and
    the Palestinians toward a peace accord. Russia, for its part, is
    counting on U.S. assistance in gaining acceptance to the World Trade
    Organization.

    James Collins, U.S. ambassador to Russia from 1997-2001, said Bush
    probably didn't smooth relations with Putin by making stops in Latvia
    and Georgia.

    No Confrontation

    ``I don't think the environment or the atmosphere was probably
    improved by the way it was done, but I also don't over- dramatize the
    effect of that,'' Collins said. ``Putin has made it pretty clear he's
    not going to engage in a confrontation with the United States.''

    Dimitri Simes, a Russian affairs scholar and president of the Nixon
    Center, a foreign policy research institution in Washington, said the
    trip may end up putting a strain on U.S.- Russian relations.

    ``The administration is clearly taking the position that they may
    have their cake and eat it too, meaning that they would successfully
    pursue a strategic partnership with Russia while being fairly
    dismissive of Russian concerns,'' Simes said.

    Bush's pledge of support for the Baltic states and Georgia comes amid
    disputes those countries have with Russia.

    Latvian President Vaira Vike-Freiberga and Putin have disagreed over
    the treatment of Russians in Latvia, where they make up 30 percent of
    Latvia's population. Putin has an ongoing border dispute with Latvia
    and Georgia, and in Georgia, Russia still has two military bases in
    Georgia comprising about 3,500 troops that Georgia's President
    Mikhail Saakashvili wants removed. Russia also has supported
    separatist movements in two regions of Georgia.

    Vike-Freiberga attended Monday's ceremonies in Moscow's Red Square
    marking the 60th anniversary of the end of World War II. Lithuanian
    President Valdas Adamkus, Ukraine President Viktor Yuschenko and
    Saakashvili did not.

    Bush told Saakashvili that he brought up the dispute over the Russian
    troops with Putin during their meeting.

    ``This isn't the first time I've had this conversation with President
    Putin on this issue,'' Bush said at a news conference in Tbilisi with
    Saakashvili at his side.

    Georgia's location between the Black Sea, Russia, Armenia, Azerbaijan
    and Turkey gives it ``strategic importance far beyond its size''
    according the State Department's Web site. It serves as ``a gateway''
    from the Black Sea to the Caucasus and the larger Caspian region and
    a ``buffer'' between Russia and Turkey, the State Department said.

    Saakashvili's government is seeking membership in the North Atlantic
    Treaty Organization within three years as it moves to build closer
    ties to the U.S. and the European Union.
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