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video: Georgia frees Russian officers
MOSCOW, Oct. 3 (Xinhua) -- Russia cut military ties
with Georgia on Tuesday amid a row with the Caucasus nation over its detention
of Russian officers on spying charges and rejected the idea of involving
mediators in resolving the dispute.
"The Russian Defense Ministry is not discussing
outlooks of military or military-technical cooperation with Georgia any more," a
high-ranking source of the ministry was quoted by the Interfax news agency as
saying. "Russia is not planning any contacts at the defense ministries' level
for 2007," the source added.
Russia will only remain in contact with Georgia on
matters regarding the implementation of agreements on the withdrawal of two
Russian military bases from Georgia, the source said.
Russia suspended postal, air, road, rail and sea
links with Georgia on Tuesday following Tbilisi's arrest of four Russian
officers, which Russia President Vladimir Putin publicly denounced as "an act of
state terrorism."
The four officers were released on Monday and
returned to Moscow later that day aboard an Emergency Situations Ministry plane.
The spy row has added to an already tense
relationship between Russia and Georgia. Ties have been strained by the Georgian
leadership's bid to join NATO and a Russian ban on imports of Georgian wines.
Earlier, Russia recalled its ambassador from Georgia
and evacuated some of the Russian personnel there amid the worst crisis in
recent years between the two countries.
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, speaking at a news
conference in Moscow, said Russia has no intention of restoring the transport
links with Georgia any time soon.
The top Russian diplomat said there is no need to
involve mediators to help solve the dispute.
"Frankly, I see no need for inviting any mediator or
third party to issues related to Russian-Georgian relations," Lavrov said,
quoted by Interfax.
"Third parties have actually interfered in relations
between Russia and Georgia and this has only done harm," he said.
In a telephone conversation on Monday with U.S.
President George W. Bush, Putin also warned against intervention by third
countries.
"Any action by third countries that the Georgian
leadership could interpret as support for its destructive policy is unacceptable
and constitutes a danger for peace and stability in the region," the Kremlin
quoted Putin as saying in a statement. Enditem