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Russia Europe security pact draft offers mutual military assistance

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  • Russia Europe security pact draft offers mutual military assistance

    Russia's Europe security pact draft offers mutual military assistance

    MOSCOW, November 29 (RIA Novosti)

    A draft treaty on European security prepared by Russia allows
    signatory states to provide military assistance to each other, the
    Kremlin said Sunday.

    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev put forward the initiative to work
    out a treaty on European security on June 5, 2008, proposing that the
    principle of indivisible security be legally sealed in international
    law, preventing any state or organization from strengthening their
    security at the expense of others.

    "...every Party shall be entitled to consider an armed attack against
    any other Party an armed attack against itself," says the draft
    published on the Kremlin website.

    "In exercising its right of self-defense under Article 51 of the
    Charter of the United Nations, it shall be entitled to render the
    attacked Party, subject to its consent, the necessary assistance,
    including the military one, until the UN Security Council has taken
    measures necessary to maintain international peace and security.

    "Information on measures taken by Parties to the Treaty in exercise of
    their right of self-defense shall be immediately reported to the UN
    Security Council," it says.

    The UN Charter's Article 51 that Russia's draft refers to says:
    "Nothing in the present Charter shall impair the inherent right of
    individual or collective self-defense if an armed attack occurs
    against a Member of the United Nations, until the Security Council has
    taken measures necessary to maintain international peace and
    security."

    The draft also says: "... the Party which has been attacked or
    threatened with an armed attack shall bring that to the attention of
    the Depositary which shall immediately convene an Extraordinary
    Conference of the Parties to decide on necessary collective measures."

    "The Extraordinary Conference of the Parties shall be effective if it
    is attended by at least four fifths of the Parties to the Treaty," it
    says, adding that decisions made by the Conference would be binding.

    "If an armed attack is carried out by, or a threat of such attack
    originates from a Party to the Treaty, the vote of that Party shall
    not be included in the total number of votes of the Parties in
    adopting a decision," it says.

    The draft is open for signing "by all states of the Euro-Atlantic and
    Eurasian space from Vancouver to Vladivostok" as well as by the EU,
    NATO, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
    and the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) and the
    post-Soviet Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).

    The draft says the Parties shall not "assume international obligations
    incompatible with the Treaty" but adds that the document "shall not
    affect the right of any Party to neutrality."

    The Parties will also have the right to withdraw from the treaty.

    Medvedev has sent copies of the draft to heads of state and chief
    executives of NATO, the EU, the CSTO, CIS and OSCE.

    The CSTO comprises Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia,
    Uzbekistan and Tajikistan. Russia's security strategy until 2020
    approved by Medvedev envisions the CSTO as "a key mechanism to counter
    regional military challenges and threats."
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