Friday, August 13, 2010
Russian Missile Deployment Extremely Dangerous says Georgia
Georgia on Aug. 12 accused Russia of taking an "extremely dangerous provocative step" by deploying a sophisticated missile defense system in Georgia's breakaway region of Abkhazia.
"It is absolutely beyond understanding what aims this extremely dangerous provocative step may serve, which poses a threat not only to the Black Sea region but to the security of Europe as a whole," the Georgian foreign ministry said in a statement.
Saying the deployment would "put into jeopardy the security of civil aviation," it called on the international community to "take decisive measures to make Russia abandon its policy of military build-up on Georgia's occupied territories and fully comply with its international commitments."
Russia announced Aug. 11 it had deployed the S-300 missile system in Abkhazia, saying it would provide anti-aircraft defense for Abkhazia and Georgia's other Moscow-backed rebel region, South Ossetia.
U.S. State Department spokesman Philip Crowley played down the announcement, saying: "I believe it's our understanding that Russia has had S-300 missiles in Abkhazia for the past two years."
Georgia insists that Abkhazia and South Ossetia are an integral part of its territory, but Russia recognized the two regions as independent after its war with Georgia two years ago.
First manufactured by the Soviet Union in 1978, the S-300 is a surface-to-air missile system capable of tracking and destroying ballistic missiles, cruise missiles and aircraft at a range of up to 60-125 miles.
The 2008 war saw Russian forces pour into Georgia after fighting broke out over South Ossetia, prompting the worst post-Cold War crisis between Russia and the West. An E.U.-brokered ceasefire has held, despite tensions.
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