Washington - Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's
allegation that the United States provoked the conflict in Georgia is
'ludicrous,' the US State Department said Thursday.
'Those types of charges that the United States was involved in
instigating it, you know, just are without foundation and just ...
ludicrous - plain and simple,' State Department deputy spokesman
Robert Wood said.
Russia must end its occupation of Georgia and comply with an
August 11 ceasefire designed to end the conflict in the former Soviet
Republic over the breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia,
Wood said.
'It needs to stop blaming others for the aggression that it
carried out against a neighbour,' Wood said.
US President George W Bush condemned Russia's decision on Tuesday
to recognize the independence of the two regions contrary to UN
Security Council resolutions. The Security Council held an emergency
meeting on Thursday in New York.
'Russia is doing a great job on its own in isolating itself,' Wood
said.
Putin, in an interview with CNN, said the fighting was triggered
by politicians in Washington to somehow influence the outcome of the
November 4 election to succeed Bush, but he offered no evidence to
support his claims and admitted it was 'conjecture.'
'The suspicion arises that someone in the United States has
specially created this conflict with the aim of aggravating the
situation and to benefit one of the candidates in the struggle for
the post of president of the United States,' he said at his Black Sea
residence in Sochi.
'It's not only that the US administration could not restrain the
Georgian leadership from this criminal act. The American side
effectively armed and trained the Georgian army,' Putin said.
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