May 18, 2010

Russia woos Ukraine on security bloc

Kyiv Post. Independence. Community. Trust - Ukraine - Update: Russia woos Ukraine on security bloc

Russian Pesident Dmitry Medvedev: Russia's Black Sea fleet will not attack neighbours
Today at 17:51 | Reuters
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev told Ukraine on Tuesday that the doors to a Russia-led

Update: Russia woos  Ukraine on security bloc
security bloc were always open and pledged that the Russian navy based in a Ukrainian port would never attack its neighbours.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev told Ukraine on Tuesday that the doors to a Russia-led security bloc were always open and pledged that the Russian navy based in a Ukrainian port would never attack its neighbours.
The Kremlin leader sought to draw Russia's ex-Soviet neighbour closer to Moscow's vision of European security on the last day of a visit in which the two sides have agreed to renew long-term cooperation after five years of cold relations.

Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, who has tilted policy towards Moscow since succeeding the pro-Western Viktor Yushchenko, has aroused the wrath of his political opponents by agreeing to extend the Russian navy's stay in Ukraine's Crimea until 2042 in return for cheaper gas.
In a bid to shore up Yanukovych at home, Medvedev defended the fleet's presence in the Black Sea port of Sevastopol as a guarantee of stability in the region.
"Will Russia use its Black Sea fleet to attack neighbouring states? No, it will not," he told a gathering of university students in Kyiv.
He made no mention of the deployment of the fleet's flagship, the rocket cruiser Moskva, to blockade the Georgian port of Poti in 2008 during Russia's brief summer war with Georgia.
Yanukovych has endeared himself to Moscow by pushing possible membership of NATO -- pursued by his predecessor -- off the agenda, but during Medvedev's two-day visit, he stressed Ukraine's neutral status as a "non-bloc state".
Medvedev, however, told him that if Ukraine's circumstances ever changed the doors of the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO) remained open.
"If in the future you would consider it proper to join the CSTO, we would be happy to invite you and accept you," Medvedev said in Kyiv. "The CSTO is not the Warsaw Pact... we do not need confrontation with NATO or other military blocs."
The CSTO includes Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.
MILITARY EXERCISES
Members have conducted military exercises and in recent years some of them agreed to set up a peacekeeping force and a rapid reaction force.
Medvedev, in comments clearly directed at U.S. and NATO ship movements in the Black Sea, said Russia was always uneasy "when foreign ships which have no links with the Black Sea basin demonstrate something or other".
The Ukrainian parliament later authorised a series of naval exercises, involving the United States, other NATO allies and Ukraine, in the Black Sea in summer.
Last year, the Ukrainian parliament defied then-president Yushchenko and refused to allow the U.S.-led multinational Sea Breeze military exercise to take place. But pro-Yanukovych deputies, who have a majority in the parliament, on Tuesday ensured a heavy vote in favour of allowing Sea Breeze and other exercises to go ahead this year.

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