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US Warship To Georgian Port Partly Held By Russia

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  • US Warship To Georgian Port Partly Held By Russia

    US WARSHIP TO GEORGIAN PORT PARTLY HELD BY RUSSIA
    By Steve Gutterman

    AP foreign
    Friday September 5 2008

    POTI, Georgia (AP) - The flagship of the U.S. Navy's Mediterranean
    fleet anchored outside a key Georgian port Friday, defiantly bringing
    in tons of humanitarian aid to a city still partly occupied by hundreds
    of Russian troops.

    The USS Mount Whitney was the first Navy ship to travel to Poti since
    Georgia's five-day war with Russia last month. The continued presence
    of Russian troops here has been a major point of friction between
    Russia and the West, which insists Russia has failed to honor a deal
    to pull back to positions held before fighting broke out Aug. 7.

    The in-your-face anchorage at Poti came as Vice President Dick Cheney
    visited nearby Ukraine, another former Soviet republic that feels
    threatened by Moscow's military aggression.

    Cheney pledged in Kiev, the capital, that the United States was
    committed to Ukraine's security and freedom and said Ukrainians
    should not be forced to live under Russia's "threat of tyranny,
    economic blackmail and military invasion."

    In a diplomatic counterpunch, Russia received support Friday from six
    other former Soviet republics who issued a joint statement condemning
    Georgia for using force to try to retake control of its separatist
    province of South Ossetia.

    The declaration by members of the Collective Security Treaty
    Organization - which groups Russia with Armenia, Belarus and four
    Central Asian nations: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and
    Uzbekistan - also praised Russia for "helping peace and security"
    in the region. However, the nations did not go as far as Russia and
    recognize Georgia's two separatist areas - South Ossetia and Abkhazia -
    as independent nations.

    The Kremlin has watched the arrival of the USS Mount Whitney and
    other U.S. warships carrying aid with deep suspicion, but a Russian
    Foreign Ministry official said Friday no military action was planned
    in response to the U.S. naval presence in the Black Sea.

    During the war, Russian forces bombed Poti, which has a large oil
    shipment facility, attacked the port and sank eight Georgian naval
    vessels in the harbor. Hundreds of heavily armed soldiers that Russia
    calls "peacekeepers" are still camped just 4 miles (6 kilometers)
    from the port.

    Still, traffic flowed freely past two Russian checkpoints Friday.

    Ketino Kebuchava, the owner of a small grocery store in Poti, welcomed
    the warship's arrival.

    "We are a small country and we need help," he said. "We welcome
    anyone but the Russians. We want the Russians out of our city and
    out of our country."

    The Mount Whitney will unload aid at Poti's commercial port Saturday,
    right next door to Poti's badly damaged naval base.

    Signs of destruction were all around. The missile boat Dioskuria -
    the flagship for Georgia's small navy - stood with its hull under
    water, its badly damaged communications masts protruding from the
    water. The windows of Georgia's naval headquarters were shattered,
    the buildings pockmarked by large caliber ammunition.

    According to the port's director of security, Vakhtang Chichradze,
    there was little the Russians didn't steal - hauling away chairs, light
    switches, radiators as well as five U.S.-made Hummer military vehicles.

    "From the military port, they took armchairs, toilets - everything,"
    he said.

    Two U.S. ships have already come and gone from Georgia carrying
    humanitarian aid, but they anchored at Batumi, to the south, a smaller
    port with no Russian military presence.

    Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and other officials have suggested the
    United States is delivering weapons to Georgia along with humanitarian
    aid - but U.S. officials have dismissed those accusations and said
    the aid included blankets and powered milk.

    "There are absolutely no weapons of any sort on these ships," said Cpt.

    John Moore. Moscow had signaled it would not impede the ship's
    movement.

    But, contrary to earlier reports, Lt. Col. John Dorrian, a spokesman
    for the US European Command, said Russians won't be inspecting the aid.

    "That will not be allowed," Dorrian said. "The port of Poti is Georgian
    sovereign territory."

    Georgian Defense David Kezerashvili told the Associated Press that
    the ship's arrival sent a strong message to Moscow.

    "It's very important for an American ship to stand for the defense
    of democracy against the totalitarian regime of Russia," he said.

    In Moscow, Russian Foreign Ministry official Andrei Nesterenko offered
    a measured response to Mount Whitney's arrival.

    "There is no talk of military action," he said, but again questioned
    the use of warships.

    "It is unlikely that warships of this class can deliver humanitarian
    aid in great quantities," Nesterenko added.

    In Portugal, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Russia was
    "deepening its isolation" by not honoring commitments to withdraw
    forces from Georgia.

    Ukraine was the third country Cheney has visited this week, after
    oil-rich Azerbaijan and Georgia, where Washington announced $1 billion
    economic aid package to help Georgia rebuild.

    Cheney reiterated Friday that Ukraine would eventually join NATO,
    despite fierce resistance from Moscow.

    "The United States has a deep and abiding interest in your well-being
    and security," Cheney said following talks with President Viktor
    Yushchenko.

    "We believe in the right of men and women to live without threat of
    tyranny, economic blackmail and military invasion or intimidation."

    The show of support was important for Yushchenko's Western-leaning
    government, which has pushed strongly for closer ties with the European
    Union and NATO.

    "We value our strategic bilateral relationship highly," Yushchenko
    told Cheney. "On the majority of the issues, including Georgia,
    we have an understanding with the United States."

    Yushchenko has also objected to Russia using its ships stationed in
    Sevastopol, a leased Russian military base in Ukraine, during the war,
    and condemned Russia's decision to recognize Georgia's two separatist
    areas as independent states.

    Cheney met separately with Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, discussing
    regional security and efforts to diversify energy supplies.

    Cheney's visit came during a political crisis pitting Yushchenko and
    Tymoshenko, coalition partners, against one another, setting Ukraine's
    government teetering on the verge of collapse.

    In the French city of Avignon, European Union nations called Friday
    for an international probe to determine which country should shoulder
    responsibility for starting the war between Georgia and Russia.
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