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Russia's envoy to NATO calls Georgian drills "insanity"

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  • Russia's envoy to NATO calls Georgian drills "insanity"

    Russia's envoy to NATO calls Georgian drills "insanity"

    19:31 | 18/ 04/ 2009


    VORONEZH, April 18 (RIA Novosti) - Russia's envoy to NATO has dubbed
    the alliance's exercises due in Georgia in early May "insanity."

    The Cooperative Longbow 09/Cooperative Lancer 09 command-and-staff
    exercise, led by the Western military bloc, will be held from May 6
    through June 1 in Georgia, and will not feature light or heavy
    weaponry.

    "On Monday I addressed NATO [incoming] Secretary General Anders Fogh
    Rasmussen with a letter asking [him] to cancel the drills in Georgia,
    due to start in early May. I believe this is absurdity and insanity,"
    Dmitry Rogozin told journalists in Voronezh in southwestern Russia.

    Among reasons why he believes the drills should be canceled, Rogozin
    cited a lack of trust. "It is provocational to rattle the saber near
    our borders until Russia-NATO military contacts are restored and until
    trust is restored between our sides," he said.

    The secretary of the Council of Defense Ministers of the post-Soviet
    Commonwealth of Independent States said earlier Saturday he saw no
    reason for uneasiness over NATO's upcoming exercises.

    "These are not maneuvers, nothing terrible will happen. These will be
    procedural drills, procedural exercises," Lt. Gen. Alexander Sinaisky
    said on Ekho Moskvy radio. "In a word, this is political demarche on
    the part of NATO."

    "Notwithstanding the negative perception by Russia, it will take place,
    and it is necessary to calmly deal with it," he added, noting that the
    exercises were planned before the August 2008 conflict between Russia
    and Georgia over South Ossetia.

    President Dmitry Medvedev warned on Friday that Russia "will be closely
    watching" the drills and will "if necessary, make appropriate
    decisions."

    "Such decisions are disappointing and do nothing to help restore
    full-level contacts between the Russian Federation and NATO," Medvedev
    said of NATO's determination to go ahead with the exercises.

    The president of Abkhazia, which Russia recognized as independent from
    Georgia along with South Ossetia after the five-day conflict sparked by
    Tbilisi's assault on South Ossetia, said Friday the republic would hold
    its own exercises in response.

    "The planned NATO exercises in Georgia do not lead to the stabilization
    of the situation in the Caucasus," Sergei Bagapsh said. "We observe the
    situation in Georgia and we will conduct our own drills in response."

    NATO has said Russia would be welcome to join the military exercises in
    Georgia, but from every indication the invitation has been ignored by
    Moscow.

    The drills are aimed at improving interoperability between NATO and
    partner countries, within the framework of Partnership for Peace,
    Mediterranean Dialogue and Istanbul Cooperation Initiative programs.

    A total of 19 countries will be participating in the exercises:
    Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Canada, Croatia,
    the Czech Republic, Georgia, Hungary, Greece, Kazakhstan, Moldova,
    Serbia, Spain, Macedonia, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, Britain,
    and the United States.
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