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Dick Cheney Calls On Free World To Help Georgia

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  • Dick Cheney Calls On Free World To Help Georgia

    DICK CHENEY CALLS ON FREE WORLD TO HELP GEORGIA

    Times Online
    September 4, 2008

    Dick Cheney addressed the media in Tbilisi Tony Halpin in Moscow

    Vice President Dick Cheney renewed America's determination to bring
    Georgia into Nato today as he condemned Russia's "illegitimate"
    invasion of the Caucasus republic.

    Mr Cheney said that it was the responsibility of the free world to
    "rally to the side of Georgia" against Russian aggression as he
    arrived in the capital Tbilisi to show support for President Mikheil
    Saakashvili.

    He told Mr Saakashvili that the United States was "fully committed" to
    Georgia's membership of Nato, a policy that has infuriated Russia. Nato
    members will meet in December to consider applications from Georgia
    and Ukraine, which Mr Cheney will visit later today.

    "Georgia will be in our alliance," Mr Cheney said after travelling
    to Tbilisi from Azerbaijan, where he held talks with President
    Ilham Aliev.

    Georgia and Azerbaijan are vital to Western hopes of reducing
    dependence on Russian energy by piping oil and gas from Central Asia
    through the Caucasus.

    "America will do its duty to work with the governments of Georgia and
    our other friends and allies to protect our common interests and to
    uphold our values," Mr Cheney told journalists with Mr Saakashvili
    at his side.

    "Russia's actions have cast grave doubts on Russia's intentions and
    on its reliability as an international partner."

    The White House announced a $1 billion aid package to help Georgia
    recover from the war with Russia before the Vice President's
    arrival. Mr Cheney told Mr Saakashvili that the US would stand by
    its ally "as you work to overcome an invasion of your sovereign
    territory and an illegitimate, unilateral attempt to change your
    country's borders by force, that has been universally condemned by
    the free world".

    He thanked Georgia for sending 2,000 troops to join the US-led
    coalition in Iraq, making it the third largest contributor of
    forces. Mr Cheney added: "Now it is the responsibility of the free
    world to rally to the side of Georgia."

    Russia's President Dmitri Medvedev has asserted Moscow's "privileged
    interests" in the Caucasus and accused the US of helping Georgia to
    "build its war machine".

    But the Kremlin failed to win backing today from a group of former
    Soviet republics for its decision to recognise the independence
    of Georgia's breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Only
    Nicaragua has supported Russia so far.

    Defence ministers in the Collective Security Treaty Organisation
    (CSTO) criticised Georgian military actions but held back from
    endorsing Russia's decision after a meeting in Moscow. The CSTO,
    currently chaired by Armenia, includes Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan,
    Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.

    Mr Cheney will travel from Georgia to Ukraine, which edged closer
    to parliamentary elections today after the sudden collapse of the
    pro-Western alliance between President Viktor Yushchenko and Prime
    Minister Yuliya Tymoshenko.

    The fresh political turmoil threatens to cast a shadow over Ukraine's
    bid to join Nato. Mr Cheney is due to meet President Yushchenko
    amid fears in Ukraine that the Kremlin will attempt to scupper its
    Nato ambitions by stirring separatist tensions in the pro-Russian
    Crimea region.

    Russia's Black Sea fleet is based at the Crimean port of Sevastopol. A
    member of Ukraine's pro-Russian opposition Party of Regions submitted
    a resolution to parliament today calling for the foreign minister to
    be sacked over the "illegal" presence of US warships in the Black Sea.

    Mr Yushchenko's party, Our Ukraine, walked out of the coalition
    government with the Tymoshenko Bloc yesterday in protest at new
    legislation restricting the powers of the presidency. The President
    has threatened to call a snap election if a new coalition is not
    formed within 30 days.

    The crisis in Georgia has contributed to the collapse of Ukraine's
    pro-Western government, which formed only nine months ago after
    Mrs Tymoshenko and her allies won a narrow victory in elections
    last September.

    Mr Yushchenko accused her of "high treason" in allegedly siding with
    Russia over the war, an allegation she denied. However, her party
    refused this week to back a motion from Our Ukraine that condemned
    Russia. Mr Yushchenko openly supported Georgia and told The Times
    last month that Nato membership was "the only way for our country to
    protect our national security and sovereignty".

    Mrs Tymoshenko is riding high in opinion polls, while the president's
    rating is in single figures. Her party blamed Mr Yushchenko for the
    crisis, saying it was a bid to damage her ahead of the presidential
    election in late 2009.
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