Moscow - Russian newspapers on Wednesday supported President
Dmitry Medvedev's decision to recognize the breakaway regions of
Abkhazia and South Ossetia, but expressed fears the move could harm
Moscow's relations with the West.
'Goodbye America, Goodbye Europe?' led the popular daily Moskovsky
Komsomolets, while business newspaper Kommersant splashed 'The
President of Russia is ready for confrontation with the West,' across
its front page.
Most analysts were caught off guard by the president's
announcement on Tuesday, expecting the Kremlin to delay such a move
and use the threat of recognizing the two Georgian regions to enhance
its bargaining position with the West.
Recognizing the two breakaway provinces 'is a bomb, set between
Russia and the West's relations for many years to come,' wrote the
newspaper Vedomosti.
Medvedev, dubbed a liberal by the West in the first days of his
presidency, took a page from the book of his tough-talking
predecessor Vladimir Putin.
'We are not afraid of anything,' Medvedev shot back when asked by
state-television if he was worried the decision could evolve into a
new Cold War.
'If (our partners) want good relations with Russia, they will
understand the reason for our decision, and things will be calm, but
if they choose confrontation, well, we have lived under such
conditions, and we can do so again,' Medvedev said.
State mouthpiece Rossiskaya Gazeta appraised the president's
words: 'Russia does not count on wide support for its initiative. It
is simply doing that which it has become impossible to avoid.
'Formal recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia is the
fulfilment of a moral and political obligation to them. No more, no
less,' it said.
Behind the headlines, commentators asked whether the recognition
was a turning point after years of what the Kremlin perceived as
humiliation by the West dating back to the country's indebtedness in
the 1990s.
'It is rather curious, if one remembers that less than one month
ago the Kremlin actively spoke of the need to build a new system of
European security and to conclude a new partnership agreement with
Europe,' Kommersant wrote.
But the newspaper said the freeze in ties with the West was not as
deep as it appeared since Russia continues to allow NATO safe passage
through its territory for operations in Afghanistan, 'the only thing
that counts for the alliance.'
'This means Moscow doesn't intend to completely break with the
West, but is now ready to hold negotiations only on its own terms,'
the daily said.
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