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Post-Soviet security bloc launches summit in Moscow

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  • Post-Soviet security bloc launches summit in Moscow

    Post-Soviet security bloc launches summit in Moscow

    16:1714/06/2009

    MOSCOW, June 14 (RIA Novosti) - A summit of the post-Soviet CSTO
    security bloc leaders opened in Moscow on Sunday in the absence of the
    Belarusian president, who pulled out of the meeting in protest against
    Russia's trade restrictions.

    The summit of the Collective Security Treaty Organization comprising
    Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Uzbekistan and
    Tajikistan is expected to focus on the creation of joint rapid-reaction
    forces and the prospects for their development.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said earlier on Sunday that
    foreign ministers of the CSTO member states had prepared at their
    meeting, held before that summit, all necessary documents for creating
    a joint rapid-reaction force.

    "The main result of today's session of the CSTO Council of Foreign
    Ministers was the fulfillment of instructions from the February CSTO
    summit on the creation of a rapid-reaction force. The package of
    documents is ready. They include an agreement on the rapid-reaction
    force, and documents regulating the deployment and the strength of the
    collective forces," he said.

    Russia already has joint military contingents with Belarus and Armenia
    through the CSTO.

    The new force will comprise large military units from five countries -
    Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.

    Analysts say the creation of a powerful military contingent in Central
    Asia reflects Moscow's drive to make the CSTO a pro-Russian military
    bloc, rivaling NATO forces in Europe.

    Russia's security strategy until 2020, recently approved by President
    Dmitry Medvedev, envisions the CSTO as "a key mechanism to counter
    regional military challenges and threats."

    The rapid-reaction force will include an airborne division and an air
    assault brigade from Russia, and an air assault brigade from
    Kazakhstan. The other members will contribute a battalion-size force
    each, although Uzbekistan would "delegate" its detachments to take part
    in operations on an ad hoc basis.

    Meanwhile, Belarus has said that no decisions passed at the CSTO summit
    will be valid without its involvement.

    Russia has infuriated Minsk by banning imports of the country's dairy
    products, citing violations of new Russian standards.

    The Belarusian Foreign Ministry said in a note handed to the CSTO'S
    secretariat that the country's non-participation "means the lack of
    approval from the Republic of Belarus of decisions being considered" at
    the summit, along with the foreign and defense ministers' meetings, and
    "consequently a lack of consensus for the taking of these decisions."
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