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  • Dangerous Maneuvers: 5 NATO members & partners decline invitation

    WPS Agency, Russia
    May 5 2009


    DANGEROUS MANEUVERS;
    Five countries, NATO members and partners, declined invitations to the
    forthcoming exercise in Georgia. Armenia and Azerbaijan accepted the
    invitation. Russia is upset by how diligently the Alliance and Georgia
    work on coordination

    by Natalia Portyakova, Aleksei Nikolsky

    LATVIA, ESTONIA, MOLDOVA, KAZAKHSTAN, AND SERBIA REFUSE TO PARTICIPATE
    IN THE MANEUVERS IN GEORGIA; NATO's military exercise in Georgia
    begins tomorrow to the accompaniment of protestations from Russia.




    NATO's military exercise beginning tomorrow consists of two
    phases. Spokesman for the Alliance James Appathurai said in late April
    that tactical compatibility between NATO contingents and those of the
    partners would be practiced in the first phase involving 650
    servicemen. The second phase involving up to 450 servicemen would be a
    counter-terrorism drill. The military exercise would be run in Vaziani
    barely 20 kilometers from Tbilisi.

    "Phase two will probably stipulate deployment of light weapons, light
    armored vehicles, and helicopters," according to Igor Korotchenko of
    the Defense Ministry Public Council, formerly an officer of the
    Russian General Staff. The specialist assumed that it was the first
    phase of the exercise that disturbed Russia because it stood for
    tactical compatibility, i.e. actions of the regular Georgian army
    within larger NATO contingents against the Russian Armed
    Forces. Sources in the Defense Ministry pointed out meanwhile that the
    very fact of the military exercise was proof that the Alliance was
    prepared to share with Georgia the kind of information that could be
    used against Russia.

    Russia had taken the exercise in Armenia last year (it involved 1,00
    servicemen from 21 country) in stride. This time, however, its
    attitude was different. President Dmitry Medvedev called the exercise
    in Georgia a "provocation" and emphasized that it was wrong to run
    military games on the territories where the hostilities had raged but
    recently.

    Initial plans had stood for participation of 19 NATO members and
    partners in the military exercise but 5 of them declined the
    invitations. Latvia and Estonia pleaded shortage of
    personnel. Kazakhstan, Moldova, and Serbia turned the offer down after
    consultations with Russia. Representative to NATO Dmitry Rogozin
    admitted yesterday that these countries had "listened to Russia and
    weighed all consequences." Rogozin implied that some other countries
    just might follow suit. A spokesman for the Alliance meanwhile said
    that official notices had been received from only two countries.

    The Duma passed a special resolution in April advising Azerbaijan and
    particularly Armenia to reconsider their options (Armenia is a member
    of the CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization). Neither country
    has done so. Their resolve to participate in the exercise despite
    protestations from Moscow jibes with their multiple vector foreign
    policies "ill-advised as they are," Political Techniques Center Vice
    President Sergei Mikheyev commented.

    Alerted by deterioration of the political situation in Georgia,
    Russian contingents in South Ossetia and Abkhazia went to a higher
    readiness status and ran some exercises too, an officer of the
    Caucasus Military District said. According to this certainly
    knowledgeable source, numerical strength of the Russian contingents in
    the newly sovereign republics was considerably less than the 10,000
    the Georgian authorities were complaining about.

    Source: Vedomosti, No 80, May 5, 2009, p. A2

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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