Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Russia, Georgia agree to withdrawal of bases

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Russia, Georgia agree to withdrawal of bases

    Russia, Georgia agree to withdrawal of bases

    AFX Europe (Focus)
    May 30, 2005

    MOSCOW (AFX) - Moscow and Tbilisi have agreed on the pullout by the
    end of 2008 of Russia's last two Soviet-era military bases in Georgia,
    signalling a resolution to a long-running and bitter dispute between
    the two neighbours.

    "The final pullout will be finished during 2008," Foreign Minister
    Sergei Lavrov said, following talks in Moscow with his Georgian
    counterpart Salome Zurabishvili.

    "We have taken an important and constructive step. We have achieved
    our goal," Zurabishvili told journalists.

    Lavrov said a joint statement detailing the precise timetable for
    the withdrawal of troops and equipment will be issued later today.

    However, Interfax news agency quoted a high-ranking military source
    as saying that the pullout wil not begin until 2006.

    About 3,000 servicemen are stationed at the bases -- one in
    Akhalkalaki, near the Georgian-Armenian border, the other in Batumi,
    on the Black Sea coast.

    The two bases date from the Soviet era, when they were part of the
    Soviet Union's south-western flank with NATO.

    Russia's refusal to make a speedy withdrawal has contributed to tense
    relations with its neighbour since the collapse of the Soviet Union,
    especially since Georgia's pro-Western president Mikhail Saakashvili
    came to power in the "rose revolution" of November 2003.

    In another sign of a possible thaw in relations, Lavrov said there
    has also been a decision made to agree, before the end of the year,
    on delimitation of the Georgian-Russian border, which runs along the
    Caucasus mountains range.

    "We will do everything" to contribute to peaceful resolutions
    of Georgia's separatist conflicts in Abkhazia and South Ossetia,
    Lavrov added.

    Moscow-backed separatist forces control both regions, which are on
    the Georgian side of the rugged border.

    Russia's relationship with Georgia has long been complicated by
    Moscow's attempts to stem an erosion of its influence in the Caucasus,
    where the US has become an increasingly important player.

    Georgia has applied for membership in NATO and hosts a small contingent
    of US military trainers, prompting Moscow to seek assurances that
    foreign troops will not be allowed in after its own forces leave.

    President Vladimir Putin recently said such a deplyment would "affect
    our security."

    However, he has also acknowledged that Moscow could not drag its feet.

    "Foreign bases of all countries in the world -- if they are not
    occupying troops -- are there with the agreement of their partners. If
    there is no such desire among our partners, then we have no choice. We
    have to take this step. For better or worse, we are leaving there,"
    he said.

    Georgia is impoverished and has a population of less than 5 mln, but
    has gained in strategic importance with the building of an oil export
    pipeline that stretches from the Caspian Sea to the Mediterranean
    with a section passing through Georgia.

    Its troubled border with Russia also includes a section shared with
    Chechnya, where tens of thousands of Russian troops are tied down in
    the second guerrilla war in a decade.
Working...
X