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Russia pulls out of NATO meeting over Georgia exercises

NATO vows to hold Georgia war games despite Russia threat
NATO has not been informed of Russia's plan to cancel a meeting of top military brass next month over alliance war games in Georgia and will push ahead with the exercises, a NATO spokesman said Monday. "As far as NATO is concerned, nothing has changed. The chiefs of defence meeting will take place and Russia remains invited. It is their decision to attend or not," he said. He said NATO had only seen press reports about the intentions of Russia, which has been deeply angered by the alliance's plans to hold military exercises in Georgia from May 6 to June 1. Earlier, in an interview with Vesti-24 television, quoted by the Interfax news agency, Russia's envoy to NATO said that Moscow was pulling out of a May 7 meeting with NATO chiefs of defence in protest. "If there will be no reaction (to a Russian complaint about the exercises) we will take certain measures," ambassador Dmitry Rogozin said. "I can reveal one of them now: the meeting of the commanders of the general staffs of Russia and NATO, planned for May 7, will not take place," he said. Russia and Georgia, which hopes to one day join NATO, fought a short war in August and the alliance has vehemently opposed Moscow's subsequent recognition of the breakaway Georgian regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The exercises, which have been planned since the spring of 2008, are to involve about 1,300 people from 19 NATO and partner countries and will be held at a training centre 20 kilometres (12 miles) east of Tbilisi. Despite Rogozin's threat, NATO vowed to press ahead with the war games. "Planning for the exercise -- of which Russia have been fully informed since planning began a year ago -- continues," the spokesman said. He said that the meeting of top NATO and Russian brass is an "informal meeting for them to prepare future engagements." NATO froze top level ties with Russia in the wake of the war in Georgia, and these have only recently resumed officially. The NATO spokesman said that alliance and Russian ambassadors are scheduled to meet formally on April 29, while planning is underway for a meeting between their foreign ministers "in the second half of May". No date has been finalised.
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) April 20, 2009
Russia will pull out of a meeting with senior NATO military officials to protest what its envoy described Monday as "provocative" war games planned by the alliance in Georgia.

"If there will be no reaction (to a Russian complaint about the exercises) we will take certain measures," the envoy, Dmitry Rogozin, said in an interview with Vesti-24 television, quoted by the Interfax news agency.

"I can reveal one of them now: the meeting of the commanders of the general staffs of Russia and NATO, planned for May 7, will not take place," Rogozin said.

He blasted the exercises as "provocative" but did not say whether Moscow would scuttle a meeting of the NATO-Russia Council -- the highest-level body linking Russia and the alliance -- expected to take place in May or June.

Russia and Georgia have been at loggerheads since fighting a brief war in August, and Moscow has been extremely wary of any cooperation between NATO and the pro-Western government in Tbilisi.

"From Russia's point of view, and from Georgia's point of view, and from the viewpoint of world affairs, such war games carry a clearly provocative character," Rogozin said.

In Brussels, NATO said that it had not been informed about Russia's plan to cancel the meeting of top military brass and that it would push on with the exercises in Georgia.

"As far as NATO is concerned, nothing has changed. The chiefs of defence meeting will take place and Russia remains invited. It is their decision to attend or not," a NATO spokesman said.

But Washington described Russia's threatened move as unfortunate.

"If it's true, it's unfortunate," State Department spokesman Robert Wood told reporters, adding: "These exercises were long planned."

Wood said he did not have confirmation of any Russian decision.

The exercises, which have been planned since the spring of 2008, were originally expected to involve 1,300 personnel from 19 NATO and partner countries.

Earlier on Monday, Kazakhstan, an ally of Russia as well as a partner in NATO's Partnership for Peace programme, pulled out of the exercises, which are to be held at a training centre 20 kilometres (12 miles) east of Tbilisi.

"Planning for the exercise -- of which Russia have been fully informed since planning began a year ago -- continues," the NATO spokesman said.

He said that the meeting of top NATO and Russian brass is an "informal meeting for them to prepare future engagements."

Formal high-level contacts between Russia and NATO only resumed recently after being frozen by NATO in the wake of last summer's war in Georgia.

Analysts say that the exercises come at an awkward time, given that Moscow's relations with the West have been improving since the inauguration of US President Barack Obama.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has called the exercises a "dangerous decision" that would threaten Moscow's relations with NATO.

Georgian Foreign Minister Grigol Vashadze, speaking at a press conference in Stockholm on Monday, said it was his country's right as a sovereign state to host the exercises.

"I am not very much interested in Russia's reaction to those exercises because it is a constitutional and sovereign right of Georgia to hold exercises... together with whom ever it pleases us," Vashadze said.

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Russia calls for NATO exercises in Georgia to be postponed
Brussels (AFP) April 16, 2009
Moscow is demanding the postponement of NATO exercises in Georgia scheduled to start next month, Russia's NATO mission said Thursday.







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