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Merkel Calls For Caucasus Summit Ahead Of Baltic Tour

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  • Merkel Calls For Caucasus Summit Ahead Of Baltic Tour

    MERKEL CALLS FOR CAUCASUS SUMMIT AHEAD OF BALTIC TOUR

    Deutsche Welle
    http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,358 8880,00.html
    Aug 25 2008
    Germany

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel has called for a summit of Georgia's
    neighbors following the country's recent conflict with Russia. On
    Monday, she heads to the Baltics to lobby for a more nuanced approach
    towards Moscow.

    Russia itself was not on the list of countries envisaged by Merkel --
    which included Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan -- but no country
    should be excluded from participation, the spokesman said.

    "It's up to the French presidency of the EU to decide if this
    conference will take place, as well as when and who will be invited,"
    spokesman Thomas Steg said.

    According to the latest edition of German weekly Der Spiegel, which
    will be published on Monday, Merkel proposed the summit idea to French
    President Nicolas Sarkozy, whose country holds the European Union's
    rotating presidency. Berlin reckons the theme of the summit should be
    "reconstruction and stability in Georgia and the region," the German
    government spokesman said.

    The German leader has been firm in demanding Russia withdraw its
    troops from Georgia proper and made it clear that she takes a dim
    view of Moscow's recent actions.

    Merkel visited Tbilisi where she made it clear after talks with
    Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili that Georgia "will become a
    member of NATO" -- a bone of contention with Moscow which is deeply
    uneasy about the military alliance's expansion.

    But Merkel also made a point of visiting Russia for talks with
    President Dmitry Medvedev in Sochi on the Black Sea and saying that
    the lines of communication must remain open.

    Her Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier has also warned against
    any "knee-jerk" reaction in the West's relations with Moscow, such
    as suspending talks on a partnership and cooperation agreement with
    the EU.

    Reinforcing Germany's stance, Berlin urged Russia to withdraw its
    troops completely from Georgia on Saturday, saying that while the
    withdrawal had begun the information available indicated it was
    not complete.

    Steg said the German government's assessment concurred with that of
    Saakashvili. He added that Chancellor Angela Merkel had spoken by
    telephone to Saakashvili on Saturday.

    "The German government expects that Russia complete the withdrawal
    without delay in line with the Six Point Plan signed by Russian
    President Dmitry Medvedev and pulls back its troops to the lines
    before the outbreak of hostilities," Steg said.

    In particular, road and rail transport routes between western and
    eastern Georgia had to be cleared and full freedom of movement re-
    established, he added, saying Russian troops should leave the zone
    to the south of South Ossetia.

    Merkel heading to Baltics

    In another whirlwind diplomatic tour Merkel heads to the Baltic states
    on Monday, hoping to mend damaging differences in Europe's response
    to the Georgia crisis and over future relations with Moscow.

    The Baltics, under Soviet control in the Cold War and now European
    Union and NATO members, have joined fellow ex-communist states
    Poland and Ukraine -- and the United States and Britain -- in sharply
    criticizing Russia during the recent conflict with Georgia.

    Days after Russian talks rolled into Georgia on Aug. 8, the leaders
    of the three Baltic states plus Poland's President Lech Kaczynski
    and Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko all traveled to Tbilisi to
    express their solidarity with President Saakashvili.

    The five leaders appeared together on stage at an anti-Moscow rally
    in Tbilisi on Aug. 12, joining hands and holding them aloft to cheers
    from a crowd of tens of thousands of people.

    They even slammed a ceasefire agreement between Moscow and Tbilisi
    brokered by President Sarkozy, saying it failed to protect their
    ally Georgia.

    Germany walking a diplomatic tightrope

    Berlin by contrast, which over recent years has enjoyed perhaps
    the warmest relations with Moscow of any of the EU's 27 members,
    has fully supported Sarkozy's efforts and has tried to have a more
    nuanced approach.

    Berlin wants cooperation with Moscow to "based on common concepts of
    values and goals ... The application of military force and marching
    into a sovereign country of course are not part of these common
    values," Steg said last week.

    The differences in approach have led to talk of a split between the
    countries of "old Europe" like Germany and France and those of "new
    Europe" like Poland and the Baltics over how to deal with Moscow.

    "Merkel must try to calm down some the rhetoric because to my
    understanding the current policy of some new (EU) members like Poland
    and the Baltics is counter-productive, not only in respect to Georgia
    but also in respect to Russia," said Otfried Nassauer from the Berlin
    Center for Transatlantic Security.

    "The new members have pushed NATO to take a relatively strong position,
    but this is not really backed up very well by real policy options,"
    Nassauer told the AFP news agency. "To threaten Russia with an
    interruption of NATO-Russia Council discussions is not a real threat."

    But Merkel must be careful as she is walking a tightrope, said
    Alexander Rahr, a Russia expert at the German Council on Foreign
    Relations (DGAP) in Berlin.

    "I think she is trying to please everyone," Rahr told AFP. "But this
    could of course backfire, this kind of policy, because it is not
    quite clear where Germany really stands."

    After first visiting Stockholm for talks with Swedish Prime Minister
    Fredrik Reinfeldt on Monday, Merkel will travel to Tallinn the next
    day where she will meet with Estonian Prime Minister Andrus Ansip
    and President Toomas Hendrik Ives.

    Later on Tuesday Merkel, who grew up in communist East Germany where
    Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin worked for the KGB, travels to
    the Lithuanian capital Vilnius for talks with Prime Minister Gediminas
    Kirkilas and with President Valdas Adamkus.
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