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NATO Set To Blast Georgia Invasion As 'Disproprotionate'

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  • NATO Set To Blast Georgia Invasion As 'Disproprotionate'

    NATO SET TO BLAST GEORGIA INVASION AS 'DISPROPROTIONATE'

    Spiegel Online
    Aug 19 2008
    Germany

    What to do about Russia? NATO is gathering in Brussels today to
    come up with a unified response to Moscow's heavy-handed treatment
    of Georgia last week. Germany would like to see the European Union
    deepen its relations in both the Caucasus and Central Asia.

    Ossetian protesters gathered outside of NATO headquarters in Brussels
    to demonstrate against Condoleezza Rice's hard-line stance against
    Russia.

    After days of haggling over terminology, NATO's partners have agreed
    on a common term to describe Russia's actions in invading Georgia:
    "Disproportionate." Following Russia's march into Georgia less than
    two weeks ago, the 26-member North Atlantic Treaty Alliance is meeting
    in Brussels on Tuesday to discuss its future relationship with Moscow.

    Although it was refused status as an accession candidate at the
    NATO summit in Bucharest this spring, Georgia is part of NATO's
    "Partnership for Peace" program, and the alliance is deeply divided
    over the extent to which it should support the Caucasus nation.

    Russia's move to invade Georgia earlier this month has left NATO
    divided in two camps reminiscent of the debate in Europe in the
    run-up to the Iraq war in 2003. Led by the United States and
    its ambassador to NATO, Kurt Volker, the one camp is calling for
    action and questioning whether there is a future for the NATO-Russia
    Council. The US originally called for the current crisis meeting, but
    it has also blocked efforts for a parallel meeting of the NATO-Russia
    Council. The US is also reportedly considering eliminating the council
    altogether in light of recent events. Under the council, the 26 NATO
    member states have cooperated with Russia since its creation in 2002
    as part of efforts to assuage Russian fears about NATO expansion,
    which now includes countries directly on its border.

    "We don't want to destroy the NATO-Russia Council, but Russia's actions
    have called into question the premise of the NATO-Russia relationship,"
    Volker said on Monday.

    Russia had requested a meeting of the NATO-Russia Council on
    Tuesday, but it withdrew the request after waiting for a week without
    response. Moscow's ambassador to NATO, Dimitry Rogozin, said a meeting
    had become pointless: "It's like waiting for the emergency physician."

    Widespread Distrust

    Backed by the Baltic states as well as Poland and the Czech Republic,
    US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, said she wanted to send a
    "strong message" to Russia. The Eastern European countries have also
    called on NATO to respond to Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili's
    plea for aid by, for example, sending its NATO Response Force (NRF)
    troops into Georgia. Because of their historical experiences with
    the Soviet Union, distrust of Moscow is widespread (more...) in the
    Baltic states as well as in Warsaw and Prague.

    But Germany, France and other primarily Western European allies are
    putting their emphasis on continued dialogue with Moscow. French
    Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said NATO would send Russia a firm
    message on Tuesday without threatening the country. The priority,
    he said, should be reducing tensions in the region. "There can be no
    peaceful solution without Russia, this huge European Union neighbor,"
    Kouchner said in Paris on Monday.

    For its part, the German government has called for the EU to intensify
    its ties in the Caucasus and neighboring Central Asia. Speaking during
    her trip to Tbilisi on Sunday, Merkel said Europe must establish
    stronger ties with the Caucacus states like Georgia, Azerbaijan
    and Armenia as well as former Soviet states in Central Asia like
    Kazakhstan. A handful of those countries are already participants in
    the European Neighborhood Policy, which promotes trade and economic
    ties with nations in Europe's backyard (more...). But Merkel's
    government expressly wants to expand the number of countries linked
    to that EU program.

    "She particularly mentioned countries that haven't been directly
    included in the neighborhood policy so far," German government
    spokesman Thomas Steg said on Monday.

    "Good Neighborly Cooperation"

    Steg said any concrete proposals would be announced by France, which
    currently holds the six-month rotating presidency of the EU. But he
    said working groups in Germany and France were currently discussing
    the possibility of holding a conference under the working title
    "Reconstruction and stability in Georgia and the Caucasus region." Steg
    said, however, that there were currently no plans to hold an EU
    crisis meeting on Georgia. Nor did he comment on the "consequences"
    French President Nicolas Sarkozy is calling for if Russia doesn't
    withdraw its troops from Georgia swiftly. He did reiterate, however,
    that German supports Georgia's sovereignty.

    Steg said that Germany would likely redefine its future relations
    with Russia this autumn. He said there would be "good neighborly
    cooperation" built on a basis of common values. "But the application of
    military force and invading a sovereign state certainly aren't a part
    of these shared common values," he added. The EU foreign ministers
    recently agreed to take a closer look at EU-Russian relations in the
    fall, and Germany would do the same, he said.

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    Steg also said that German Chancellor Merkel had not shifted positions
    on Georgia since the last NATO summit in Bucharest. At the time,
    Merkel and Sarkozy prevented NATO from starting the accession process
    with Georgia through the Membership Action Plan -- instead saying
    Tbilisi could become a member at an unspecified point in the future.

    At a press conference held with Saakashvili on Sunday, Merkel said
    that as a free and independent country, Georgia can decide "with NATO,
    when and how it will be integrated into NATO and in December we will
    make a first assessment of the situation." She added, however, that
    "we are on a clear path to NATO membership."

    On Monday, Merkel spokesman Steg said Berlin feels that Georgia needs
    more reforms and modernization before it can become a NATO member. At
    the same time, he argued, it is clear that Georgia needs international
    help and aid. The first step would be international observers and
    later, possibly peacekeeping troops.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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