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Georgia, Russia resume talks on withdrawing Russian bases

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  • Georgia, Russia resume talks on withdrawing Russian bases

    Georgia, Russia resume talks on withdrawing Russian bases

    AP Worldstream
    May 23, 2005

    MISHA DZHINDZHIKHASHVILI


    Georgia and Russia resumed negotiations Monday on withdrawing
    Soviet-era Russian bases from the Caucasus Mountains country, as
    Russian President Vladimir Putin said Moscow would not tolerate being
    pressured in the talks.

    The two countries have been unable to agree on a timetable for the
    withdrawal of the bases _ a source of growing tension as Georgian
    President Mikhail Saakashvili and his Western-oriented government seek
    to shake off Russian influence.

    As a Russian delegation arrived in Tbilisi, Putin warned Georgian
    officials against putting pressure on Moscow in the talks, saying in
    televised remarks from Moscow that "there is nothing that would
    require an instantaneous withdrawal of the troops."

    Georgia last week imposed sanctions against the bases in a bid to have
    Moscow speed up the withdrawal, limiting visas to Russian soldiers and
    placing additional controls on the shipment of equipment and cargo to
    and from the bases.

    "Such a pressured way of conducting negotiations seems ungrounded to
    me," Putin said in Moscow.

    Putin hinted that Russia had its own means for pressuring its former
    satellite states, by urging Russian energy companies to charge world
    market prices for supplies instead of the discounted rates offered to
    former Soviet republics.

    "We need to build relations with foreign partners in the sphere of
    energy supplies on market conditions," Putin said, but added that
    "economic sanctions do not always prove effective in achieving
    political goals."

    Georgia has insisted the bases be out by January 2008, but Russia
    wants more time to prepare infrastructure to house the returning
    troops and equipment.

    Georgian officials appeared ready for a compromise,
    however. Parliament speaker Nino Burdzhanadze told Kviris Palitra
    newspaper that Georgia may accept having the bases withdrawn in the
    course of 2008, as Moscow has suggested.

    "It is not crucial whether the bases will leave before Jan. 1, 2008,
    or in May of that year," she was quoted as saying in Monday's edition.

    Russia's special envoy leading the delegation, Igor Savolsky, denied
    speculation that the two sides would be discussing the issue of
    compensation for the bases' withdrawal. Moscow previously insisted on
    several hundred million dollars (euros) in payment.

    "There has not been and there will be no talk on compensation,"
    Savolsky told reporters upon arriving at the Tbilisi airport. "The
    sides have agreed that they will seek additional external financial
    resources."

    Savolsky also said that some of the troops would be relocated to
    Armenia, an ex-Soviet republic that is a close regional ally to Russia
    and where Moscow has a military presence. Most of the troops in
    Georgia, however, will be moved to Russia, he said.

    Separately on Monday, Saakashvili opened a new customs checkpoint on
    the Georgia-Azerbaijani border. The checkpoint was built under a
    U.S.-financed program, which envisages building several
    others. Saakashvili voiced hope that similar checkpoints would soon
    operate on the borders with Abkhazia and South-Ossetia, two breakaway
    provinces that Tbilisi hopes to bring into the fold.
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