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Russia Needs No Controllable Crises

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  • Russia Needs No Controllable Crises

    "RUSSIA NEEDS NO CONTROLLABLE CRISES"
    Madina Shavlokhova, Olga Pavlikova

    WPS Agency
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    September 22, 2008 Monday
    Russia

    SERGEI LAVROV: RECOGNITION OF SOUTH OSSETIA AND ABKHAZIA IS NOT
    A PRECEDENT; Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov met with Senators to
    discuss results of the crisis in the Caucasus and proclaim Russia's
    foreign policy as peaceful.

    Addressing enlarged meeting of the Federation Council's Committee
    for International Affairs yesterday, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
    said that recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia was setting no
    precedents for the Trans-Dniester and Nagorno-Karabakh conflicts.

    The minister reiterated his determination to continue promotion of
    peaceful settlement of conflicts in the Commonwealth on the basis of
    the international law. "I'm talking of the Trans-Dniester region and
    Nagorno-Karabakh," he said. "Every conflict has its own distinctive
    features and formats and mechanisms of international brokering,
    but the South Ossetian crisis sets no precedents for them."

    Committee Chairman Mikhail Margelov told Gazeta that the
    Russian Federation intended to promote reunification of the
    Trans-Dniester region with Moldova and settlement of the conflict
    over Nagorno-Karabakh. "We observe certain progress in the processes
    of settlement there," he said. "Moreover, there have been no acts
    of genocide or outright aggressions there." Margelov even referred
    to the latest opinion poll conducted by the All-Russian Public
    Opinion Research Center that revealed a doubling of the number of
    the respondents supporting recognition of Kosovo. Pollsters say that
    only 15% respondents advocated recognition of Pristina in March and
    31% in September when Russia officially recognized South Ossetia
    and Abkhazia. Margelov pronounced Russian diplomacy's stand on the
    matter of Kosovo unchanged. "We are constantly criticized for being
    illogical because we do recognize Abkhazia and South Ossetia but
    deny recognition to Kosovo," Margelov said. "Let us then consider
    the West. Is the West being logical? Since it recognized Kosovo,
    it should have recognized South Ossetia with Abkhazia too, as well
    as the North Cyprus and the republic in the west Sahara."

    In any event, Lavrov's meeting with senators was focused on results
    of the conflict in the Caucasus. The minister reminded those present
    that recognition of their sovereignty had been the only guarantee
    of security of South Ossetia and Abkhazia and actually of their
    very survival in the face of Tbilisi's chauvinistic policy. "I'm
    talking of the policy going back into the days of Gamsakhurdia (Zviad
    Gamsakhurdia - first president of post-Soviet Georgia - Gazeta) who
    suggested deportation of all Ossetians into Russia," the minister said.

    Speaking of how the foreign media covered the operation against
    Georgia, Lavrov called it counter-productive. "General public in Russia
    is perfectly aware of Western journalists' biases and prejudices,"
    he said. According to the minister, the way the foreign media covered
    the conflict exposed the depth of anti-Russian trends the West was
    using to promote its own objectives and interests in nearby countries
    including Ukraine.

    Lavrov was disturbed by the efforts of some Western countries and
    Georgia to revise the agreements president of Russia and France made in
    Moscow. "We expect that our partners in the European Union, the ones
    who also signed Medvedev-Sarkozy principles and became guarantors of
    security of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, will put an end to the travesty
    of the truth and common sense within the framework of the OSCE."

    Margelov would later say that the minister proclaimed Russia's
    foreign policy as thoroughly peaceful. "Lavrov made it plain that
    Russia is not going to foment any controllable crises in order to
    fish in troubled waters."
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