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US Senate recognizes Abkhazia, South Ossetia

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  • US Senate recognizes Abkhazia, South Ossetia

    US Senate recognizes Abkhazia, South Ossetia

    10:47 - 01.08.11


    The US Senate unanimously passed on July 29 a resolution supporting
    Georgia's territorial integrity and recognizing Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia as regions `occupied by the Russian Federation', Civil Georgia
    reported.

    The resolution, S RES 175, was sponsored by Democratic Senator Jeanne
    Shaheen and Republican Senator Lindsay Graham. The both Senators are
    co-chair of Georgia Task Force at the US think-tank Atlantic Council -
    a bipartisan group aimed at promoting policy debate on Georgia.

    `Today, the Senate spoke with one voice in support of Georgia's
    territorial integrity,' Senator Shaheen said on July 29. `While I am
    pleased by the Senate's action and the clear message we are sending to
    Georgia and the Russian Federation, the situation there remains
    fragile and unresolved, as Russian troops are still occupying
    Georgia's Abkhazia and South Ossetia regions.'

    Georgia's ambassador to the United States, Temur Yakobashvili, praised
    the resolution.

    `This document is a very solid and firm foundation for de-occupation
    of the Georgian territories,' Yakobashvili said.

    The approved resolution is slightly amended from its initial draft,
    which was first referred to the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
    in December, 2010; but in essence the document remains the same,
    calling on Russia to withdraw troops to pre-August, 2008 war
    positions.

    In one of the amendments the final text changes term `de facto' in
    reference to the authorities in breakaway regions with `the
    authorities in control in the regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia' -
    a wording used by the Georgian government in its State Strategy on
    Occupied Territories.

    Among other amendments introduced in the final text are references to
    some of the new developments, which have taken place since December,
    such as remarks by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at the April
    15, 2011 meeting in Berlin between the Foreign Ministers of NATO and
    Georgia in which she said that she shared Georgia's concerns regarding
    `recent Russian activities that can negatively affect regional
    stability.' The draft also makes a reference to the Russian Foreign
    Minister's visits to Sokhumi and Tskhinvali in April.

    The resolution affirms that it is `the policy of the United States to
    support the sovereignty, independence, and territorial integrity of
    Georgia and the inviolability of its borders, and to recognize
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia as regions of Georgia occupied by the
    Russian Federation.'

    It calls on Moscow, Tskhinvali and Sokhumi to allow for the full and
    dignified return of internally displaced persons and international
    missions to Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

    The resolution also says that the Senate `supports peaceful,
    constructive engagement and confidence-building measures between the
    Government of Georgia and the authorities in control in South Ossetia
    and Abkhazia and encourages additional people-to-people contacts.'

    `[The Senate] affirms that finding a peaceful resolution to the
    conflict is a key priority for the United States in the Caucasus
    region and that lasting regional stability can only be achieved
    through peaceful means and long-term diplomatic and political dialogue
    between all parties,' the resolution says.

    The Georgian authorities have been actively lobbying for this type of
    resolution, that would refer to Abkhazia and South Ossetia as occupied
    regions, in Washington and other western capitals, describing the
    effort as part of `de-occupation policy'.

    Georgian parliamentary committee for foreign relations sent in April,
    2010 a request to lawmakers from 31 countries to `declare the two
    Georgian regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia as being territories
    under Russian occupation and recognise the ethnic cleansing committed
    by Russia' in those territories.

    U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs,
    Philip H. Gordon, said in March, 2011, that use of term "occupied" by
    Washington in reference to Abkhazia and South Ossetia was not meant to
    be a "provocation," but simply description of situation on the ground.

    "We don't know what else to call it," he said while speaking at the
    Global Security 2011 Forum in Bratislava on March 3.


    Tert.am

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