Thursday, April 3, 2008

Ukraine and Georgia not let into NATO

Ukraine and Georgia not let into NATO
03.04.2008 Source: Pravda.Ru URL: http://english.pravda.ru/world/americas/104769-Ukraine_Georgia-0

The representatives of NATO couldn’t agree on whether to let the former USSR republics in NATO or not. The US and Canada that voted for their entry, were strongly opposed by Germany and France.

On Wednesday afternoon the members of the Alliance couldn’t decide on whether to give Membership Action Plans (MAP) to Ukraine and Georgia.

NATO’s official spokesman James Appathurai supposed that on the 3-day summit in Bucharest, Romania, the decision on whether to welcome Georgia and the Ukraine in NATO or not will not be made.

“NATO is divided on Georgia and the Ukraine”, - he adds. The majority agreed, but Germany and France considered it too early to grant both states the action plan status.

The USA and Canada support Georgia’s and Ukraine’s NATO bid. However, the question on letting Croatia and Albania in NATO wasn’t so controversial. The members of the Alliance invited these countries to join NATO.

It was expected that another country of the Baltic Sea, Macedonia, will be invited to join the alliance on the summit. However, Greece blocked an invitation to Macedonia because of a row over former Yugoslav republic’s name. NATO spokesman underlined that it is too early to put a full stop over the question of Macedonia joining NATO. It is quite possible that this country will become the member of the Alliance in the near future.

Translated by Lena Ksandinova

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Nato denies Georgia and Ukraine

The US had backed Nato membership for Georgia and Ukraine
Parliament Palace in Bucharest

Nato has confirmed it will not yet offer membership to Georgia or Ukraine after the 26-member alliance was split amid strong objections from Russia.

Moscow said Nato's promise at a summit in Romania that the nations would join one day was a "huge strategic mistake".

Macedonia vowed to leave the summit after it was denied entry. Albania and Croatia were given the green light.

Nato members were set to endorse US plans for anti-missile defences in Europe, which Russia has opposed.

US and Czech officials have agreed to base a missile defence radar on Czech soil.

"Georgia's and Ukraine's membership in the alliance is a huge strategic mistake which would have most serious consequences for pan-European security"
Alexander Grushko
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister

Georgia eyes Iraq route

Greek veto for Macedonia bid

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This issue is something of a success for US diplomacy, says the BBC's Jonathan Marcus from the summit.

However, the US had also called for Georgia, Ukraine and Macedonia to be allowed to join, so the decision to postpone their membership process was a setback for President George W Bush, our correspondent adds.

A night of diplomatic wrangling over the new members had poisoned the summit's atmosphere, he says.

'Not happy'

The alliance decided not to offer Ukraine and Georgia a membership action plan - a gateway to membership - but agreed on Thursday to review this in December.

NEW NATO MEMBERS
Albania

* Pop: 3.6 million
* Area: 28,748 sq km
* Miltary service: compulsory but due to be abolished by 2010
* Army: aiming for army of 14,500

Croatia

* Pop: 4.4 million
* Area: 56,538 sq km
* Military service: draft abolished in 2008
* Army: aiming for army of 16,000


Nato Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer told a news conference that Georgia and Ukraine would become members eventually.

Germany and France had been opposed to putting the two nations on the path to membership, amid concerns voiced by Russia over Nato's eastward expansion.

"Georgia's and Ukraine's membership in the alliance is a huge strategic mistake which would have most serious consequences for pan-European security," Interfax news agency quoted Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Grushko as saying on the sidelines of the summit.

Georgian diplomats said they were "not happy" with the delay but welcomed the promise of eventual membership.

Macedonian officials said their rejection was a "huge disappointment" that would undermine stability in the Balkans, and said they would leave the three-day summit early.

Macedonia's membership was strongly opposed by Greece, which has a northern province that is also called Macedonia.

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Row as Nato door creaks open

George W Bush

It argued that the former Yugoslav republic's insistence on being known as Macedonia implied a territorial claim.

Separately, President Nicolas Sarkozy indicated France would return next year to the Nato military command it left in 1966 in protest at the dominance of US commanders.

He also said a battalion of extra French troops would be deployed to Afghanistan, easing fears of a crisis within the Western coalition there.

The US says the French move, expected to involve up to 1,000 extra soldiers, will free up some of its troops to move to southern Afghanistan, where Canada had demanded Nato reinforcements be sent.

Canada's parliament voted last month to extend its military mission in volatile southern Afghanistan to 2011 - but only if its allies sent reinforcements.

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