Moscow - An arms embargo against Georgia would top the
Russian agenda at international peace talks in Geneva on October 15,
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Friday.
'When deliberating there on how to prevent another aggression, the
task of preventing Georgia's re-militarization will be paramount,'
Lavrov told a discussion group of Russian foreign policy experts,
news agency Ria-Novosti reported.
He said the embargo should stand, 'at least as long as (Georgian
President) Saakashvili remains in power.'
Russia is also likely to use its seat on the UN Security Council
to seek backing in warnings to the United States not to rearm its
Georgian ally.
But Moscow's refusal to discuss the status of Georgia's two
breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia and decision to keep
nearly 8,000 troops there has angered the West and raised red flags
in Europe about the usefulness of peace talks.
President Dmitry Medvedev agreed on Monday to the talks with
Georgia in Geneva as the last phase of a peace accord won by
President Nicolas Sarkozy, who holds the European Union's rotating
presidency.
Russia pledged to withdraw Russian troops from checkpoints deep
inside the former Soviet state to within the boundaries of Georgia's
two breakaway regions, but declared 3,800 troops would remain in each
region.
On the agenda for the peace negotiations, Medvedev said Monday,
was the return of ethnic Georgian refugees to war-ravaged South
Ossetia.
The UNHCR put that figure at 31,000 in a study released Friday.
While peace talks were expected to address unfulfilled commitments
to a Medvedev-Sarkozy ceasefire agreement that stopped the five-day
war on August 12, Russia has drawn a line through talks on the status
of Georgia's rebel regions - the last point in the pact.
Medvedev has said Russia's recognition of the two republics as
independent was was 'final and irrevocable.'
'We aren't going to discuss recognizing or the status of South
Ossetia and Abkhazia,' Lavrov reiterated on Friday.
Nicaragua is the only state to have followed Russia's lead in
recognizing the separatist provinces, a move that infuriated Georgia
and its Western allies.
But Russian media reported this week that Israel had ordered a ban
on arms sales to Georgia out of fear that Moscow may retaliate by
selling higher grade weapons to its enemies in the Middle East, such
as Syria.
Russia said Israel supplied Georgia with spy drones used for
reconnaissance ahead of the conflict.
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