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NATO raps Russia over troops in Georgia

Russia cannot deal with NATO that protects criminals: envoy
Russia cannot cooperate with NATO if it insists on "protecting criminals", Moscow's envoy to the Alliance, Dmitry Rogozin, said Tuesday. Rogozin was talking to reporters after NATO foreign ministers meeting in Brussels accused Russia of "deliberate destruction of civilian infrastructure" and called for Russian troops to withdraw from Georgia, "If NATO wants to cooperate with criminals, we can't stop them, but we cannot cooperate anymore with an organisation which works with criminals," said Rogozin, who compared Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili to Hitler and Saddam Hussein. The Russian envoy accused NATO of "turning a blind eye" to the destruction wrought by Georgian forces on civilians in the breakaway province of South Ossetia. The NATO ministers, in a joint statement, said "We cannot continue with business as usual," in dealing with Russia, decrying the "deliberate destruction of civilian infrastructure". NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer announced the effective freezing of the NATO-Russia Council until Russian troops withdraw from Georgia. NATO's reaction "could change the level and quality of the cooperation," between Russia and NATO, he said. The Russian ambassador, known for his fiery language, said NATO had failed in its role as a mediator in the conflict. He said Russia was in support of the peace deal brokered by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, adding that "we are prepared to cooperate with the EU and the OSCE." He belittled the NATO talks as "a mountain giving birth to a mouse". "It's now clear that all the declaration, all the accusations, were just a bluff," he added.
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Aug 19, 2008
NATO said Tuesday it was impossible to continue "business as usual" with Russia until it honoured its promise to withdraw its troops from Georgia.

The 26 NATO foreign ministers, meeting in an emergency session in Brussels, accused Russia of carrying out the "deliberate destruction of civilian infrastructure" in the former Soviet republic.

"We call on Russia to take immediate action to withdraw its troops from the areas it is supposed to leave," under a French peace plan agreed by all sides, the NATO ministers said in a statement.

In a furious response, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov blasted NATO as "unobjective and biased" and accused the transatlantic alliance of whitewashing a "criminal regime."

NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said that in the face of signs that Russia was failing to withdraw its soldiers and armour from Georgia, the Alliance was effectively freezing the NATO-Russia Council, the bilateral body established in 2002 as a framework for dialogue.

"We are not abandoning the NATO-Russia Council but as long as Russian forces are occupying a greater part of Georgia, I cannot see a NATO-Russia Council convening at any level," he added.

"The future of our relations with Russia will depend on the concrete actions Russia will take to abide by the words of President Dmitry Medvedev... which is not happening at the moment."

Almost immediately Russia's navy announced it was pulling out of a NATO exercise in the Baltic Sea and was unable to host a scheduled visit by a US naval frigate, RIA Novosti news agency reported.

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who had called the NATO meeting, stressed that "the United States does not want to isolate Russia."

"(But) the behaviour of Russia in this most recent crisis is isolating Russia from the principles of cooperation in the community of states," she told journalists in Brussels.

She said the Alliance was sending "a very clear statement that NATO, having come so far after the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union... is not going to permit a new line to be drawn in Europe."

The NATO ministers stressed Georgia's "independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity" and announced the setting up of a NATO-Georgia commission.

They also reaffirmed Georgia's future as a NATO member, despite denying Tbilisi official candidate statement at an Alliance summit in April.

Russia is strongly opposed to Georgia's moves to join NATO.

Scheffer also said 15 civil and emergency experts would be sent to assess the extent of the damage in Georgia and stressed that 150,000 refugees were in "dire need" of humanitarian aid.

"The Alliance is considering seriously the implications of Russia's actions for the NATO-Russia relationship," the foreign ministers said in their statement.

"We have determined that we cannot continue with business as usual," they said.

"We remain concerned by Russia's actions during this crisis and remind Russia of its responsibility for maintaining security and order in the areas where it exercises control, especially in light of continuing reports of Russia's deliberate destruction of civilian infrastructure."

Lavrov said Russia, which blames Georgia for starting the conflict by sending its forces into the breakaway Georgian region of South Ossetia, found the NATO statement unacceptable.

"The declaration above all appears unobjective and biased because there's not a word about how all this started, why it happened, who started the aggressive action and who armed Georgia," he said in Moscow.

In one positive sign for the peace process, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) -- including Georgia and Russia -- agreed Tuesday in Vienna to send 20 observers "immediately" to Georgia to oversee the ceasefire deal.

The final green light came from Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, the organisation's chairman, Finnish Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb, said in Brussels.

In total, the OSCE said it would send up to 100 additional monitors to join the handful it already has in Georgia.

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Georgian minister to meet Rice, NATO counterparts Tuesday
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.







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