INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Georgia seeks to calm furor over base plan |
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by Misha Dzhindzhikhashvili Associated Press Entered into the database on Sunday, May 15th, 2005 @ 18:04:33 MST |
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TBILISI, Georgia -- Georgia asked Saturday for calm negotiations over the withdrawal
of two Soviet-era bases as Moscow threatened retaliation if services were cut
to the facilities -- something Georgia's parliament threatened to do earlier
this year. A Georgian presidential spokesman said the nation was dropping the threat made
by parliament in March to isolate the bases if a deal on a pullout was not reached
by Sunday. "When negotiations are going on and there is visible progress, we believe
it is necessary to pursue negotiations in a constructive environment, without
any agitation," spokesman Gela Charkviani said. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Valery Loshchinin said "the one-sided
steps that Georgia is attempting to take will have mutually harmful effects.
Russia may take corresponding measures." In Moscow, the Russian Foreign Ministry said Georgia's response "shows
that a normal negotiating process is under way." The bases are a source of sharp antagonism between Russia and Georgia, which
is looking West and trying to shed Russian influence. President Bush, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and the U.S. Senate have
urged Russia to withdraw its troops from Georgia, with Rice saying Moscow should
end its military presence in the former Soviet republic as quickly as possible. Georgia and Russia have been sparring over the timetable for withdrawal. Tbilisi
wants the troops out within two years, while Moscow insists it needs at least
four years and possibly more than a decade to complete the job. In a sign Georgia wishes to avoid outright confrontation, Foreign Minister
Salome Zurabishvili said Friday that new Russian proposals on the pullout were
"interesting." |