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Georgia hopes for NATO entry action plan in 2007

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  • Georgia hopes for NATO entry action plan in 2007

    Georgia hopes for NATO entry action plan in 2007


    ARE, Sweden, May 24 (Reuters) - Georgia hopes to start the road to
    NATO entry in 2007 and does not expect its unresolved conflicts or two
    remaining Russian bases to get in the way, European integration
    minister Georgy Baramidze said on Tuesday.

    Since his election last year President Mikhail Saakashvili has made
    closer ties with Western institutions a priority.

    Visiting the ex-Soviet state earlier this month U.S. President George
    W. Bush said Washington encouraged Georgia's closer co-operation with
    NATO, although alliance officials have said in the past it still has
    to resolve political problems.

    "We hope that at the next NATO summit, which will probably take place
    at the start of 2007, that we will be given a membership action plan
    invitation," Baramidze said at a meeting of NATO countries and partner
    states in northern Sweden.

    NATO hopefuls Croatia, Macedonia and Albania have all been given such
    action plans. Georgia is already a NATO partner and has held military
    exercises with the alliance.

    Baramidze said neither the two Russian bases, located near the border
    with NATO-member Turkey, nor unresolved conflicts in the breakaway
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia regions, would halt Tbilisi's plans.

    "It is a mistake to think that someone could block Georgia's NATO
    entry using that," Baramidze said.

    Georgia is in the middle of painful talks with Moscow over a timetable
    for closing the Russian bases and withdrawing troops.

    A new round of talks started in Tbilisi on Monday, with Georgia
    demanding a pullout by the end of 2008.

    Russia said last week it might move armoured vehicles from Georgia to
    nearby Armenia, prompting an angry reaction from neighbouring
    Azerbaijan.

    "We understand Azerbaijan's concerns, it is very clear why they are
    concerned, but we cannot influence this process," Baramidze said.

    05/24/05 17:58 ET
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