Moscow will draw conclusions from NATO's pro-Georgian stance, and
the future of the Russia-NATO Council "depends on our partners,"
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Tuesday.
The Russia-NATO Council was not established to teach Russia
on how to behave towards Georgia, but to ensure security in Europe
and the Euro-Atlantic region, Lavrov said.
"We believe that the council preserves its importance, but
everything depends on our partners," he was quoted by the Itar-Tass
news agency as saying.
The encouragement for Georgia joining NATO "is dictated by an
intention which I cannot describe as being anything but
anti-Russian and supportive of the aggressive regime," said the
foreign minister.
"To be sure, there will be consequences. I think that we will
draw appropriate conclusions," he was quoted by the RIA Novosti
news agency as saying.
Russian troops have begun pulling out from Georgia, Lavrov
said, adding that the "pullout will be made commensurately to
Georgia's fulfillment of its obligations under the peace plan" and
it will take three to four days.
Speaking at a press conference after the NATO ministerial
talks in Brussels, NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer
warned that NATO's relations with Russia "will depend on concrete
actions Russia will take to honor the words of President Medvedev
to abide by the six-point ceasefire agreement."
The NATO-Russia Council is a mechanism for consultation,
consensus-building, cooperation, joint decision and joint action,
in which the individual NATO member states and Russia work as equal
partners on a wide spectrum of security issues of common interest.
Georgia's bid to join NATO was rebuffed at the alliance's
April summit in Bucharest. However, the NATO ministers on Tuesday
reaffirmed their plans to eventually accept Georgia as a NATO
member.
Soon after the NATO declaration, Russia announced that it
would not participate in the NATO-led Open Spirit 2008 naval
exercise in the Baltic Sea, and would refuse to receive a U.S.
warship in the Far East port of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky.
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In response to assignment:
iReport for CNN