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  • US, Allies Weigh Punishment For Russia

    US, ALLIES WEIGH PUNISHMENT FOR RUSSIA
    By Matthew Lee

    AP
    12 Aug 08

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Scrambling to find ways to punish Russia for its
    invasion of pro-Western Georgia, the United States and its allies
    are considering expelling Moscow from an exclusive club of wealthy
    nations and have scrapped plans for an upcoming joint NATO-Russia
    military exercise, Bush administration officials said.

    But with scant leverage in the face of an emboldened Moscow, Washington
    and its friends have been forced to face the uncomfortable reality
    that their options are limited to mainly symbolic measures, such as
    boycotting Russian-hosted meetings and events, that may have little or
    no long-term impact on Russia's behavior, the officials said Tuesday.

    With the situation on the ground still unclear after Russian President
    Dmitri Medvedev on Tuesday ordered a halt to military action in
    Georgia, U.S. officials were focused primarily on confirming a
    cease-fire and attending to Georgia's urgent humanitarian needs
    following five days of fierce fighting, including Russian attacks on
    civilian targets.

    "It is very important now that all parties cease fire," Secretary
    of State Condoleezza Rice said. "The Georgians have agreed to a
    cease-fire, the Russians need to stop their military operations as
    they have apparently said that they will, but those military operations
    really do now need to stop because calm needs to be restored."

    At the same time, however, President Bush and his top aides were
    engaged in frantic consultations with European and other nations over
    how best to demonstrate their fierce condemnations of the Russian
    operation that began in Georgia's separatist region of South Ossetia,
    expanded to another disputed area, Abkhazia, and ended up on purely
    Georgian soil.

    "The idea is to show the Russians that it is no longer business as
    usual," said one senior official familiar with the consultations among
    world leaders that were going on primarily by phone and in person at
    NATO headquarters in Brussels, where alliance diplomats met together
    and then with representatives of Georgia.

    A senior U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity to describe
    confidential conversations among the leaders of other nations,
    said European and other leaders have been blunt with Russia that
    it must withdraw its forces. Russian leaders have said they do not
    plan a long-term occupation, the official said. The official was not
    specific about whether Russia has offered a timeline for withdrawal.

    "People are saying, 'You know you cannot stay,'" the official said. "We
    have been hearing from Russia, 'We don't want to stay.'"

    For now, the Bush administration decided to boycott a third meeting
    at NATO on Tuesday at which the alliance's governing board, the
    North Atlantic Council, was preparing for a meeting with a Russian
    delegation that has been called at Moscow's request, off icials said.

    In addition, a senior defense official said the U.S. has decided to
    dump a major NATO naval exercise with Russia that was scheduled to
    begin Friday.

    Sailors and vessels from Britain, France, Russia, and the U.S. were
    to take part in the annual Russia-NATO exercise aimed at improving
    cooperation in maritime security. But the official said there is no
    way that the U.S. could proceed with it in the midst of the Georgian
    crisis.

    The naval exercise began a decade ago and typically involves around
    1,000 personnel from the four countries, officials said. The Pentagon
    also is looking at a variety of ways it could respond to humanitarian
    needs in Georgia, but officials have not yet made any final decisions.

    In the medium term, the United States and its partners in the Group of
    Seven, or G-7, the club of the world's leading industrialized nations
    that also includes Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan,
    are debating whether to effectively disband what is known as the G-8,
    which incorporates Russia, by throwing Moscow out, the officials said.

    Discussions are also taking place on whether to revoke or review
    the May 2007 invitation to Russia to join the 30-member, Paris-based
    Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, which consists
    primarily of established European democracies, the officials said.

    The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because no decisions
    have yet been made and=2 0consultations with other countries involved
    are still under way.

    Bush spoke on Monday and Tuesday with fellow G-7 leaders as well
    as the heads of democratically elected pro-Western governments in
    formerly Eastern bloc nations, some of which are among NATO's newest
    members and have urged a strong response to Russia's invasion of a
    like-minded country.

    On Monday on his way home from the Olympics in China, Bush talked
    with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, Lithuanian President Valdas
    Adamkus and Polish President Lech Kaczynski. He then called Georgian
    President Mikhail Saakashvili, the White House said. On Tuesday, he
    spoke with Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi and German Chancellor
    Angela Merkel.

    Rice, who returned early to Washington late Monday from vacation
    to deal with the crisis, held a second round of talks with foreign
    ministers from the Group of Seven countries in which they were briefed
    on European Union mediation efforts led by French President Nicolas
    Sarkozy, who met Tuesday with Medvedev in Moscow.

    "They believe that they have made some progress and we welcome that
    and we certainly welcome the E.U. mediation," Rice told reporters at
    the White House.

    Later, Saakashvili told reporters that he accepted the cease-fire
    plan negotiated by Sarkozy.

    Despite the flurry of activity, there was still uncertainty about
    whether Russia had in fact halted its military action in Georgia,
    with reports of conti nued shelling of civilian and military sites.

    The State Department on Tuesday recommended that all U.S. citizens
    leave Georgia in a new travel warning, saying the security situation
    remained uncertain. It said it was organizing a third evacuation
    convoy to take Americans who want to leave by road to neighboring
    Armenia. More that 170 American citizens have already left Georgia
    in two earlier convoys.

    Just hours after Bush said in a White House address that the invasion
    had "substantially damaged Russia's standing in the world" and demanded
    an end to what he called Moscow's "dramatic and brutal escalation"
    of violence, Medvedev said he had ordered an end to military action.

    Associated Press writers Jennifer Loven, Anne Gearan, Pauline Jelinek
    and Lolita C. Baldor contributed to this report.
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