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Georgian minister to meet Rice, NATO counterparts Tuesday

NATO must reaffirm Georgia's bid to join: Rice
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called Monday for NATO to reaffirm Georgia's bid for membership and thwart Russia's "strategic objective" of stopping the Alliance's expansion. Rice, who arrived in Brussels Monday for crisis talks with NATO allies on Georgia, told reporters on her plane that Washington would not try to speed up Georgia and Ukraine's path to membership in the Alliance. But she said NATO must make it clear to Russia that it cannot stand in the way of former Soviet countries building closer relationships with the West. "We are going to send the message that we are not going to allow Russia to draw a new line at those states that are not yet integrated into the transatlantic structures like Georgia and Ukraine," she said. "We are determined to deny them their strategic objective."

The NATO foreign ministers are meeting Tuesday, at Washington's request, to seek a common position on the Georgia situation and reaffirm their solidarity with Tbilisi. At the last NATO summit in Bucharest in April, leaders agreed that Georgia and Ukraine should join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization eventually, but neither nation was given candidate status and no timetables were set. Membership Action Plan (MAP) status for Georgia and Ukraine is due to be reviewed at a December meeting. "I don't expect that we will -- and nor have we sought to -- accelerate MAP for Georgia," Rice said. "We have said that was a matter for December and we will take that up in December." Rice castigated Moscow again for the eruption of violence in the Caucasus this month, saying it would pay the price in the long run for its incursions into Georgia.

"Russian protestations that it wants to be a part of the international community in a 21st century way, the Russian president who continually says things that his forces don't carry out: those are matters that are much harder to rebuild than Georgian ports," she warned. "Russia is a state that is unfortunately using the one tool that it has always used when it wishes to deliver a message. And that is military power. That is not the way to deal in the 21st century." Rice said Russian President Dmitry Medvedev was failing to keep his pledge to withdraw Moscow's forces from Georgia Monday, hinting that he may lack the authority to fulfil his promise. "(I wonder) why the Russian president either will not or cannot keep his word," she said. But she insisted there would be no radical break with Moscow, with cooperation continuing on issues such as dealing with the nuclear programmes of Iran and North Korea. "In my conversations with (Russian Foreign Minister) Sergei Lavrov, as a matter of fact, we did affirm that we continue to have strategic projects of common interest," she said.

by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Aug 18, 2008
Georgian Foreign Minister Eka Tkeshelashvili will hold bilateral tallks with NATO counterparts on Tuesday, on the sidelines of an Alliance meeting on the Georgia-Russia conflict, officials said Monday.

A NATO official said the Georgian minister "will not address the council" of 26 NATO foreign ministers.

However Tkeshelashvili has organised several bilateral talks including with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, a spokeswoman for Georgia's NATO mission told AFP.

"It's a ministerial meeting on the Georgian crisis so it is normal that she is there," the spokeswoman said, adding that Tkeshelashvili had a full day of meetings planned including also with the Belgian, Finnish, German and Norwegian foreign ministers.

Tkeshelashvili is likely to hold a press conference after the NATO ministerial meeting at which the Alliance members are expected to voice their support for Georgia's territorial integrity and to call for the terms of a ceasefire deal with Russia to be honoured.

"We are awaiting the results of the ministerials," before reacting to the NATO talks, the Georgian spokeswoman said.

The NATO foreign ministers are meeting, at Washington's request, to seek a common position on the Georgia situation and reaffirm their solidairy with Tbilisi.

Russia's envoy to NATO Dmitry Rogozin warned Monday that "the quality of cooperation" between Moscow and the Alliance would suffer if NATO foreign ministers fail to reach a "responsible decision," when they meet.

Tkeshelashvili cancelled a planned trip to NATO's headquarters last week due to the crisis back home.

Georgia has asked NATO for military assistance, notably to replace a radar system destroyed in the Russian offensive.

earlier related report
Russia, US ramp up war of words ahead of NATO talks on Georgia
Russian and US officials ramped up the diplomatic war of words on Monday on the eve of an extraordinary meeting of EU foreign ministers to discuss the crisis in Georgia.

The 26 NATO foreign ministers will hold their emergency meeting at the Alliance headquarters in the Belgian capital on Tuesday where they are set to offer help and support to Tbilisi while sending a strong message to Moscow over its military intervention there.

The extraordinary meeting was called by US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice who is seeking a comprehensive review of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's relations with Moscow.

"Our long-term goal is not to have an adversarial relationship with Russia but it cannot be business as usual," a senior US official in Brussels said.

"We have to take a look at all the elements of the relationship and this of course would include high-level meetings."

"Of course, there have to be some consequences" for what all NATO members are agreed was the "disproportionate use of force," he added.

Among those ties under scrutiny are dialogue on counter-terrorism and missile defence.

Russia's envoy to NATO warned that "the quality of cooperation" between Moscow and the Alliance would suffer if NATO foreign ministers fail to reach a "responsible decision," when they meet Tuesday.

Envoy Dmitry Rogozin said Moscow had already withdrawn a request for a meeting of the NATO-Russia council, the formal forum for talks.

"We don't want to hear that (Mikheil) Saakashvili is a saint," he added, comparing the Georgian president's actions in the breakaway province of South Ossetia to the worst excesses of Hitler and Stalin.

Rogozin, who blamed Washington for the failure to hold a Russia-NATO council meeting last week, added: "We hope it will be a balanced and responsible decision and that the US will not break all the glassware in our house."

Despite the US official's assurance that "I think you'll see a NATO more united than you might expect," other diplomatic sources said the subject of Russia's role in Georgia had split NATO members.

Britain, Canada, the United States and most eastern European member states are in one camp seeking a tough stance on Russia's actions, the sources said.

Meanwhile most of western Europe, led by France and Germany and backed by Hungary, Slovenia and others, were more cautious of further hurting ties with Moscow.

NATO chief Jaap de Hoop Scheffer spoke with several Alliance foreign ministers Monday, seeking to forge consensus on the Georgia-Russia conflict ahead of a meeting in Brussels, a spokeswoman said.

The NATO spokeswoman said "I think you can expect a strong message to Russia," though the details remain to be agreed.

Scheffer is certainly expecting the Allies to stress their firm support for Georgia's territorial integrity

"The foreign ministers will also probably send a message of solidarity and will agree on a package of measures," the spokeswoman told AFP.

These would likely include agreement to send a team of civil emergency planning experts on to help Georgia to assess the damage done to its infrastructure during the Russian military action which began over a week ago, including energy supplies and the public health system.

The ministers could also agree to help assess the damage to Georgia's military facilities, in particular reports that its radar system was badly damaged.

The NATO foreign ministers will back the ceasefire agreement between Georgia and Russia and may stress the need to fully implement the agreement "including the international mechanism to monitor respect of the engagements taken by both sides," Romero said.

Georgia's foreign ministry on Monday accused Russia of violating the ceasefire agreement by continuing military operations and failing to withdraw troops.

The NATO foreign ministers are also set to stress their backing for the agreement reached by Alliance leaders in Bucharest in April that Georgia will one day be offered membership, without setting any dates.

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What Will Be The Outcome Of The Georgian-Ossetian War
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The very real possibility of full-scale war between Georgia and South Ossetia raises questions about its possible outcome.







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