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NATO Holds Georgia War Games, Russia Critical

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  • NATO Holds Georgia War Games, Russia Critical

    NATO HOLDS GEORGIA WAR GAMES, RUSSIA CRITICAL
    MISHA DZHINDZHIKHASHVILI

    6 May 09
    TBILISI

    NATO launched military exercises in former Soviet Georgia on Wednesday
    after heavy criticism from neighboring Russia and a brief mutiny in
    the Georgian military.

    Russia -- which regards NATO as a Cold War relic with intrusive
    ambitions to expand into former Soviet countries -- angrily dismissed
    as a "provocation" Georgian accusations that Tuesday's mutiny was a
    coup attempt engineered in Moscow.

    Adding to tensions, Russia on Wednesday expelled two Canadian diplomats
    who worked at NATO offices in Moscow. The Foreign Ministry said the
    NATO employees' expulsion was meant as retaliation for the alliance's
    decision to kick out two Russian envoys from of its headquarters in
    Brussels, apparently over a February spy scandal.

    "We, naturally, were forced to react," Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov
    said in televised comments Wednesday, adding the reciprocal measure
    was simply playing by the "rules of the game."

    Georgia has stepped back from its initial allegations that Tuesday's
    mutiny was orchestrated by Moscow to topple Georgian President Mikhail
    Saakashvili, and now say it was aimed at disrupting the NATO exercises.

    Hundreds of Georgian soldiers surrendered late Tuesday after a daylong
    standoff at the Mukhrovani tank battalion headquarters near the
    capital, Tbilisi, during which they had barred the defense minister
    from entering and declared they would refused to follow orders.

    Some Georgian opposition members called the mutiny a charade,
    cooked up by Saakashvili to rally disgruntled Georgians around the
    beleaguered president.

    Opposition supporters have protested for weeks in the capital,
    accusing the president of corruption, mismanagement and provoking
    Georgia's August war with Russia.

    Russian-Georgian relations have been tense since the pro-Western
    Saakashvili came to power amid a popular revolution in 2003, and
    worsened after the war and Russia's recognition of two breakaway
    Georgian regions.

    Russia is also annoyed at Georgia courting closer ties with NATO, the
    United States and the European Union, and is especially riled by the
    NATO military exercises under way at a military base near Tbilisi --
    not far from the base at which Tuesday's revolt occurred.

    Russian officials view the war games as a typical manifestation of
    Western meddling, and have accused the alliance of intervening in
    Georgia's domestic politics by holding the exercises.

    Georgian Defense Ministry spokesman David Dzhokhadze told The
    Associated Press that no battlefield maneuvers were planned until at
    least May 11, and meetings would dominate proceedings until then.

    Georgia expects 15 countries to take part in the NATO exercises,
    Dzhokhadze said, Switzerland, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Serbia said they
    would not take part. Armenia has also said it would bow out, but Dzho
    khadze said Georgia has yet to be notified.
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