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  • Us: Russia Putting Dangerous Pressure On Georgia

    US: RUSSIA PUTTING DANGEROUS PRESSURE ON GEORGIA

    Reuters
    June 18 2008

    Russia is putting dangerous pressure on Georgia that threatens to
    ignite a wider conflict in the Caucasus, a senior U.S. official told
    Congress on Wednesday.

    Assistant Secretary of State Dan Fried recounted a list of recent
    Russian actions he said put economic, political and military pressure
    on Georgia, a former Soviet republic that aspires to join the western
    NATO alliance.

    "Georgia has been subjected to unremitting and dangerous pressure
    from Russia, including over the separatist regions of Abkhazia and
    to a lesser degree, South Ossetia," Fried told the House Foreign
    Affairs Committee.

    "We are very concerned about these actions, which challenge Georgia's
    territorial integrity and have increased tensions in the separatist
    regions. They risk igniting a wider conflict," Fried said.

    Abkhazia and South Ossetia threw off Tbilisi's control in the early
    1990s. Georgia wants to bring them back under its influence and resents
    the support Russia has offered them for years. Recently the Abkhazia
    dispute has flared as Moscow sent more troops to the region.

    Fried said Russia had sent combat troops to Abkhazia as part of a
    peacekeeping force and sent construction troops there to repair a
    railroad link. He noted a United Nations report that said a Russian
    fighter shot down a Georgian drone in April. Moscow has denied
    involvement in that incident.

    Fried expressed concern that Russian investors were buying property
    in Abkhazia "in disregard of Georgian law."

    "Some of these properties may have belonged to displaced persons,
    making their eventual return even more difficult," he said.

    Speaking of other tensions in the Caucasus, Fried said he did not
    think Azerbaijan was preparing for war with neighboring Armenia
    despite what he called "bellicose" rhetoric by some Azeri officials.

    Fried was responding to a query from lawmakers who referred to recent
    comments by Azeri leaders about the "occupation" of Azeri lands by
    Armenia, at a time when Azerbaijan is also accelerating its military
    spending.

    "I do not believe, and it is the assessment of the United States that
    Azerbaijan is not, despite this unwelcome rhetoric you referred to,
    preparing for war," Fried said,.

    "I share your views that the bellicose rhetoric is not helpful," he
    said, adding that the United States was keeping the situation under
    constant review.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan, two former Soviet republics, went to war in
    the early 1990s over the disputed area of Nagorno-Karabakh, killing
    thousands and forcing thousands more to flee. Azerbaijan says Armenia
    has illegally occupied the region.

    Azerbaijan, which announced a 53 percent rise in military spending in
    April, says it is committed to stalled peace talks but has refused
    to rule out using force to restore its control over the disputed
    area. (Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by David Storey and
    David Wiessler)
    From: Baghdasarian
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