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Estonian FM rejects EU commissioner's ideas concerning Georgia

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  • Estonian FM rejects EU commissioner's ideas concerning Georgia

    Baltic News Service
    February 9, 2007 Friday 3:07 PM EET

    ESTONIAN FOR MIN REJECTS EU COMMISSIONER'S IDEAS CONCERNING GEORGIA


    Estonia's Reformist Foreign Minister Urmas Paet does no see eye to
    eye with Siim Kallas, vice-president of the European Commission and
    former chairman of the Reform Party, concerning expediency of the
    Estonian embassy in Georgia.

    Kallas wrote in Diplomaatia (Diplomacy), a publication of the
    international defense studies center, that Estonia should above all
    stake on work in international organizations, not so much on
    embassies in other countries. Kallas said that the Estonian decision
    to open an embassy in Georgia had made him think about the issue.

    Paet told BNS that the embassy in Georgia was very important as
    Georgia was a development cooperation country of the highest priority
    for Estonia and Estonia actively supported the country's pro-western
    reforms.

    "Estonia would not be taken seriously if we didn't have an embassy in
    the country. We will be believed if we have a presence in Georgia,"
    Paet said.

    The foreign minister said that via the embassy Estonia urgently
    leared of developments in the country and dispatch of a couple of
    experts was not enough.

    Paet said that Estonia had recently stepped up its activity and
    number of diplomats also in international organizations, such as the
    United Nations, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe (OSCE), the Council of Europe, the European Union and NATO.

    Paet said that Estonia had opened most of its embassies in the late
    1990s and they hadn't operated for ten years yet. The foreign
    minister said that the bilateral network of Estonian embassies was
    now optimal in the European countries, but there were plans to open
    an embassy in the Balkan region.

    Siim Kallas wrote in Diplomaatia that in case of limited resources it
    was necessary to prefer manning representatations at international
    organizations with first-rate forces to supplying and financing of
    bilateral embassies.

    Kallas said that he had great sympathy for Georgia and was always
    ready to support its pro-western and pro-reform initiatives.

    "But where is the battle for the brave Georgian being waged?" he
    asked. "It is being waged in the European Union, the European
    Parliment the Council of Europe, the United Nations as well as in
    NATO and the OSCE.

    Kallas said that perhaps it would be more sensible to draw up a team
    of those people that had been named to head the said organizations,
    establish direct links between those people and Georgian politicians.

    The vice-president asked what would happen in the reforms in Georgia
    came to a standstill and Armenia instead would rise into the focus on
    international politics. "After all, we have always had a warm
    attitude also to Armenia," he said.

    In Kallas's opinion Estonia naturally needs embassies in key
    countries, but that there are no more than 10 or 15 of them.
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