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  • Georgia: Moscow accuses west of double =?unknown?q?standards=B7?=

    Georgia: Moscow accuses west of double standards·
    Nato has no moral right to lecture us, says Kremlin
    · EU backs off from threat of sanctions over Georgia

    Luke Harding in Moscow

    The Guardian,
    Saturday August 30 2008

    Russia bitterly accused the west of bias and double standards
    yesterday, following international criticism of its actions in Georgia,
    and amid signs that the European Union is backing away from sanctions
    against Moscow.

    Russia's foreign ministry said it rejected criticism from the G7 group
    of industrialised countries. They condemned its invasion of Georgia,
    and its recognition on Tuesday of South Ossetia and Abkhazia as
    independent.

    "This step is biased and aimed at justifying the aggressive actions of
    Georgia," the ministry said, adding that the G7 - Britain, France,
    Germany, the US, Italy, Japan and Canada - had made "baseless
    assertions about Russia undermining Georgia's territorial integrity".

    Russia foreign ministry spokesman Andrei Nesterenko criticised Nato for
    "putting pressure" on Russia and said there could be "irreversible
    consequences" for "stability" in Europe. Nato had no "moral right" to
    lecture Russia, he said.

    The Kremlin's defiant tone comes ahead of a special EU summit in
    Brussels on Monday, called by France, to discuss the EU's future ties
    with Russia. On Thursday, France's foreign minister, Bernard Kouchner,
    intimated that sanctions would be discussed. Yesterday, the EU appeared

    to be retreating from this position.

    Moscow has made clear it will respond to any punitive measures from
    Brussels, which could include the suspension of a new EU-Russia
    partnership agreement. "The time to pass sanctions has certainly not
    come," said a diplomat from France, which holds the EU presidency.

    Analysts in Moscow said last night that Russia's leadership was
    relatively unconcerned about the threat of EU sanctions. "I don't think
    the contemporary west has any means to punish a state that is not quite
    a rogue state," Yulia Latynina, a commentator with the independent Echo
    of Moscow radio station told the Guardian. She added: "The Kremlin
    didn't take Tbilisi and didn't shoot [Mikheil] Saakashvili. Expelling
    Russia from the G8 or the World Trade Organisation isn't important."

    Strategically, she said, prime minister Vladimir Putin has satisfied
    his personal feeling towards Mr Saakashvili. "The war was brilliant in
    its design."

    Other analysts said they did not expect Russia to reverse its
    recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, despite the prospect of the
    states' international isolation. So far, only Belarus had said it will
    join Russia in recognising the two states.

    "I think they are watching very closely to see what will happen at the
    EU summit," said Grigorii V Golosov, professor at the faculty of
    political sciences at the European University of St Petersburg. "But I
    think the Kremlin calculation is th
    at the EU won't react seriously."

    Putin's interview with CNN on Thursday - in which he blamed the war in
    Georgia on a Washington plot to propel John McCain into the White House
    - was a deliberate tactic, Golosov said. Putin's aim was to promote
    divisions between the EU and Washington.

    Yesterday, Igor Sechin, the deputy prime minister, dismissed a report
    in the Daily Telegraph that Moscow was preparing to cut oil deliveries
    to western Europe, calling the claim "a gross provocation".
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