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Outtakes from Moscow WWII commemorations

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  • Outtakes from Moscow WWII commemorations

    Agence France Presse -- English
    May 9, 2005 Monday 10:47 AM GMT

    Outtakes from Moscow WWII commemorations

    MOSCOW


    Herewith some of the not-so-scripted moments seen on the sidelines of
    the highly choreographed Moscow ceremonies marking the 60th
    anniversary of the end of World War II.

    Putin offers to protect Bush from fresh Laura attack

    MOSCOW: Security was ratchet-tight when Vladimir Putin hosted George
    and Laura Bush to dinner in his country dacha -- but the Russian
    leader conceded that some attacks come under the radar: namely from
    one's wife.

    The US president is still smarting from the US First Lady's colourful
    mauling of him at a US press event last week, when she notably chided
    him for going to bed early, sarcastically calling him "Mr
    Excitement."

    "I took a look at coverage of your meeting with the press and I could
    see how Laura could attack you sometimes," said Putin. "So I think we
    shall have a good chance to protect you."

    Bush, who famously said he "looked into the soul" of Putin at their
    first meeting five years ago, made light of his ordeal, which also
    saw his wife compare herself to a "Desperate Housewife" from the hit
    US television series.

    "She is quite a comedian," he said.

    Russian communist hails 'great leader' Stalin

    MOSCOW: Vladimir Putin may have been careful not to overly offend
    Western political sensibilities at Monday's World War II
    commemorations -- but his discretion was compensated for by Communist
    Party leader Gennady Zyuganov.

    "We won because the people defended Soviet power and because it was
    ruled by its great leader, commander in chief Stalin," he told a
    group of communist sympathizers even as Putin hosted world leaders on
    Moscow's Red Square.

    Speaking outside the Russian capital's Belarus station -- from where
    Soviet forces back from the battlefronts returned 60 years ago -- he
    also defended the 1939 Ribbentrop-Molotov pact between Germany and
    the Soviet authorities.

    "Why does the Ribbentrop-Molotov pact produce such bitterness?" he
    asked. "It's thanks to this pact that Japan decided not to attack the
    USSR and that Turkey decided not to take part in the war at all."

    Across town on Red Square, Putin was more circumspect, hailing the
    Soviet role in defeating the Nazis, but also paying tribute to other
    European countries in defeating Hitler. "We never divided victory
    into 'ours' and 'theirs'."

    World leaders in display of reconciled unity -- or not

    MOSCOW: Over 50 world leaders were united Monday in hailing the
    defeat of Nazi Germany 60 years ago, with Russian President Vladimir
    Putin vowing to ensure such conflicts never again scar the face of
    the earth.

    But not everyone saw eye to eye on everything.

    Azeri President Ilham Aliyev and his Armenian counterpart Robert
    Kocharian, whose countries have been at war for years over the
    disputed enclave of Nagorny Karabakh, were for example visibly
    avoiding each other's gazes.

    Aliyev even boycotted a meeting of the Commonwealth of Independent
    States on the eve of Monday's ceremony to avoid meeting Kocharian --
    all the more so on May 8, the anniversary of the capture of the Azeri
    town of Shousha by the Armenians.

    At the other extreme, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev annoyed
    press photographers while standing in their sight line as he waited
    at length to talk with US President George W. Bush. In the end he was
    granted a brief audience.

    Bush, before taking his seat next to Putin to watch the spectacular
    military parade, was also seen chatting for several minutes with
    Chinese President Hu Jintao.

    Russia's air force wins epic battle - against the weather

    MOSCOW: Specially equipped Russian Air Force planes won a
    white-knuckle battle with the weather over Moscow on Monday and
    managed to prevent rain from marring a Red Square military parade
    attended by more than 50 world leaders.

    Beginning at dawn, a fleet of 11 Ilyushin-18 and Antonov-12 planes
    seeded chemical dispersal agents into bad weather upwind of Moscow,
    Air Force Colonel Alexander Drobyshevsky told the state-run ITAR-TASS
    news agency.

    Until the last minute, it appeared that their efforts, honed with
    decades of experience dating back to the Soviet era, would fail.

    Huge clouds gathered over Moscow and the Red Square parade ground
    where thousands of troops were massing to commemorate victory over
    Nazi Germany 60 years ago. Drizzle forced Russian President Vladimir
    Putin to greet guests outside the Kremlin under umbrellas.

    About 15 minutes before the parade, the rain stopped and patches of
    blue sky appeared, announcing a dry spell that held for the duration
    of the hour-long military extravaganza.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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