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EU fears Russia may target Ukraine
Aug 27, 2008 at 22:20ench Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said on Aug. 27.
Russia’s armed forces overpowered Georgia’s troops earlier this month after Tbilisi tried to retake control of the breakaway region of South Ossetia.
Russian troops continue to occupy parts of Georgia, and Moscow recognized South Ossetia and another rebel region of Georgia, Abkhazia, as independent states on Aug 26, prompting strong criticism from France and other Western powers.
Asked on Europe 1 radio whether Russia would now regularly choose to confront the West rather than cooperate with it, Kouchner said: “That is not impossible.”
“I repeat that it is very dangerous, and there are other objectives that one can suppose are objectives for Russia, in particular the Crimea, Ukraine and Moldova,” said Kouchner, whose country holds the European Union’s rotating presidency.
EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said the EU should clearly signal its support for Ukraine’s efforts to join the bloc in light of a possible threat from Russia.
“Ukraine could be the next political pressure point for Russia. Therefore, it is important from a stability point of view to send a positive signal that it is possible for Ukraine to progress towards the Union,” Rehn said in Helsinki.
EU leaders are due to hold a longscheduled summit with Ukrainian President Victor Yushchenko on Sept. 9 in the French Alpine town of Evian.
Like Georgia, Ukraine has a proWestern president who wants his country to join NATO, a move away from Moscow’s sphere of influence which has angered the Kremlin. It also has a large Russianspeaking population, but is much bigger than Georgia.
The Crimea, in southern Ukraine, hosts Russia’s Black Sea fleet at the port of Sevastopol under a lease that runs until 2017, and most people who live there are ethnic Russians.
Yushchenko has angered Moscow by suggesting Kyiv may not renew the lease.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev warned another former Soviet republic, Moldova, on Aug. 25 not to make the same mistake as Georgia by trying to seize back control of its breakaway proRussian region, Transdniestria.
The 27nation EU is holding an emergency summit on Sept. 1 and is still considering how best to respond to Russia’s actions in the conflict and to its decision to recognize Georgia’s rebel regions.
EU envoys on Aug. 26 asked planners to look at options for a civilian monitoring mission in Georgia, but agreed it would be premature to send armed peacekeepers into the region.
“However that would not be ruled out as part of a global settlement in accord with the United Nations,” said one diplomat. Any such settlement could be difficult if it needed the backing of the Security Council where Russia has a veto.
The fate of recentlylaunched negotiations over a new EURussia strategic partnership is in doubt, but Kouchner has played down suggestions that the EU should launch sanctions against Russia.