Georgia pulls out of air defense treaty with Russia
20:33 | 05/ 05/ 2008
TBILISI, May 5 (RIA Novosti) – Georgia has formally notified Russia
that it is withdrawing from a bilateral air defense cooperation treaty,
a Georgian Foreign Ministry spokesman said on Monday.
The treaty was signed between the two countries’ defense ministries on
April 19, 1995.
Tbilisi’s move comes after two Georgian reconnaissance planes were
allegedly shot down over the unrecognized republic of Abkhazia’s
airspace on Sunday.
Irakli Torondzhadze, director of the Foreign Ministry Russia
Department, handed Andrei Smag, Russia’s envoy to Georgia, official
notice.
A Georgian deputy defense minister said his country had seen no
practical benefit from the treaty with Russia.
"Georgia has long stopped participating in any defense or
military-technical cooperation programs within the CIS," Batu Kutelia
said, adding he hoped the Russian side would treat the announcement
"with understanding."
Russia’s Embassy in Tbilisi confirmed that it had received formal
notice from Georgia.
Embassy press attache Alexander Savinov said the note "has been
transferred to Moscow via official channels," but that "no instructions
have been received from Moscow yet."
Asked whether the note had set out the reasons for Georgia’s decision
to withdraw from the agreement, he said: "At this stage we are not in a
position to comment."
The CIS unified air defense system includes Armenia, Belarus,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan
and Ukraine.
Georgia previously withdrew from the CIS Defense Ministers Council
although it formally remained in the CIS unified air defense system.
Abkhazia said earlier on Monday its air defense forces had detected
another Georgian reconnaissance plane, but decided not to engage it.
"Although we downed two drones yesterday, today our [Abkhaz] radars
picked up another surveillance drone… which flew from the direction
of Georgia," Defense Minister Merab Kishmariya told RIA Novosti adding
that the unmanned aerial vehicle remained over Abkhazian territory for
10 minutes, but the decision was made not to shoot it down.
Russia’s foreign minister said Moscow is extremely concerned over
Georgia’s course to resolve its conflicts with breakaway republics by
military force.
"This course unfortunately undermines all agreements, primarily those
regarding the settlement of the Georgian-South Ossetian and
Georgian-Abkhaz conflicts," he said.