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Russia agrees to Georgia pull-out

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Published Date: 09 September 2008
RUSSIA has agreed to completely withdraw troops from Georgia's heartland inside one month, but there was no commitment to scale back its military presence in two Georgian separatist regions.
The invasion last month, in which Russian troops were sent deep into Georgia in response to an attempt by Tbilisi to retake the breakaway region of South Ossetia, drew condemnation from the West and raised fears for the security of energy supplies.

After four hours of talks at a neo-Gothic castle outside Moscow, Dmitry Medvedev, the Russian president, and Nicolas Sarkozy, president of France, announced an agreement to pull back hundreds of Russian troops still stationed in buffer zones inside undisputed Georgian territory.

Mr Sarkozy said yesterday: "If all this happens as we have indicated … that would mean that in a little more than a month, the conflict that could have had much worse human consequences would be stopped.

"I mean the guns will fall silent."

In contrast to Russia's conciliatory tone with the European Union over Georgia, tensions with the United States flared up yesterday when Russia said it was sending warships for exercises in the Caribbean Sea, its biggest deployment there since the Cold War.

The United States said it was rescinding a US-Russian civilian nuclear pact, saying the time was not right for the agreement "given the current environment".

Mr Sarkozy, accompanied by Javier Solana, the EU foreign policy chief, and Jose Manuel Barroso, the European Commission president, flew from Moscow to Tbilisi to meet Georgia's president, Mikheil Saakashvili, later yesterday.





The full article contains 261 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 08 September 2008 10:51 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Georgia , Russia
 
1

Griffe,

09/09/2008 10:47:50
Another empty promise? Last time it agreed to pull-out it occupied more of Georgia instead. When will Nato get teeth?
2

,

09/09/2008 14:25:52
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
3

SouthernGent,

09/09/2008 15:52:07
My guess is Nato is closer to abolishion than growing teeth/kahunas. Old Europe (not including UK) won't even pull their weight in Afghanistan, much less grow what they are lacking.
4

Mashimaro,

China 09/09/2008 16:17:57
Nato, the US's eastern expansion tool. Maybe people are realising they are tired of being the thugs for the oil barons.
5

SouthernGent,

09/09/2008 20:55:35
Another funny one. How many of those ex-soviet countries do you see lining up to join China or re-join Russia? Thats what I thought.
6

Mashimaro,

China 10/09/2008 01:08:41
#5 All of them.
7

Dragonhead,

Dalian,China 10/09/2008 02:23:59
Mashimaro, China. A Japanese name,interesting.Had to look up the pinyin for astronaut, so probably a dissaffected Yank or Brit. Interesting you use left wing terminology as well.Why does that not surprise me?As for placing your foot in your mouth comment on "They are tired of being thugs for the oil barons".PUTIN is the biggest THUG AND OIL BARON ON THE PLANET.duh!
8

SouthernGent,

10/09/2008 19:09:34
#6
Hardly.

Have you ever watched the movie "Bubble Boy". You may want to see it, as you also tend to live in your own little world.
9

James Donald,

Newbridge 12/09/2008 09:30:14
#8 SouthernGent - Mashi the yellow peril does live in his own little Communist fantasy world (he does not approve of the current Government in the PRC as it is not Communist enough for him).
He can't get his head rounf the fact that there are few (especially in ex-Soviet countries) who share his views.
10

Tussler,

19/07/2009 16:51:42
Georgia should agree to South Ossetia pullout and vow never to return.

 

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