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  • NATO Expansion East Suspended

    NATO EXPANSION EAST SUSPENDED

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    27.03.2008 13:58 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Ukraine and Georgia intensified their efforts on
    Wednesday to advance towards joining the NATO alliance in the face
    of Russian opposition.

    Both countries are seeking invitations to so-called membership action
    plans - the final stage to prepare potential members for joining the
    alliance - at a summit meeting of the 26-member alliance in Bucharest
    next week.

    Their applications are strongly supported by the US, which wants
    agreement to be part of President George W. Bush's legacy. A majority
    of other allies, largely from NATO's newer members in eastern and
    central Europe, also backs the applications. But there is continuing
    opposition, mainly from Western Europe, with Germany not wishing to
    provoke Russia, and other governments, such as France, hesitant.

    Dmitry Medvedev, Russia's president-elect, warned this week that the
    two countries' moves towards NATO were "extremely troublesome for
    the existing structure of European ­security".

    The Ukrainian president, Viktor Yushchenko, on Wednesday dismissed
    such claims as "myths", adding: "These are attempts to leave Ukraine
    in a position in which it would be unable to protect its security
    against threats. This is not acceptable. We are a sovereign nation."

    Mr Yushchenko suggested that failure by Kiev to join poses a risk
    to Ukrainian "sovereignty, independence", and collective security
    in Europe.

    Whereas most such invitations to the alliance have in the past been
    settled in advance of summits, diplomats said they expect the Ukraine
    and Georgia discussions to continue until the last moment.

    Georgian officials pressed their case at a meeting on Wednesday at
    NATO headquarters in Brussels. After the meeting, David Bakradze,
    Georgia's Foreign Minister, said there was agreement that Georgia's
    performance - including its contributions to NATO's missions in
    Afghanistan and other international coalitions, such as that in Iraq -
    merited a membership action plan.

    Georgia on Wednesday offered to contribute troops and logistics help
    to NATO's counter-terrorism operation in the Mediterranean.

    But Mr Bakradze said in a telephone interview that political questions
    could still delay the move. He declined to estimate the chances of an
    invitation next week. Georgia's move to the membership action plan was
    "a question of when rather than if", he said, adding that a majority
    of allies believed the "when" should be settled in Bucharest.

    Opponents to Georgia's membership have also argued it should not move
    ahead because of the so-called frozen conflicts in Georgia's breakaway
    regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. But Mr Bakradze argued that
    the issue before allies was not whether Georgia would join NATO but
    whether it would take a significant step towards it.

    Denying that Georgia would "hand an indirect veto to third countries",
    he said, in an apparent reference to Russia, The Financial Times
    reports.

    --Boundary_(ID_YmFoj8j91mr/S5vbYzO pMA)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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