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Russia has no plans to ‘slam door’ on NATO: Lavrov

By DPA,

Moscow : Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Thursday Russia had no plans to “slam the door” on NATO amid a rift with the alliance this week over Russia’s military occupation of Georgia.

“Russia, no less than NATO, relies on this mutual cooperation… NATO is much more in need of Russia’s support of its military actions in Afghanistan, where NATO’s fate appears to be in the balance,” Lavrov was quoted by news agency Interfax as saying in Sochi.

“We are not going to slam the door on NATO,” Lavrov said.

Lavrov had earlier accused the alliance Wednesday of being “biased” after NATO foreign ministers strongly criticized Russia’s push and continued occupation of Georgian territory after fighting in its breakaway region of South Ossetia.

“Everything depends on NATO priorities: it the priority is for unconditional support of (Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili), then we won’t be to blame for the bankrupting of the alliance’s relations with Russia,” he said.

Earlier Thursday, a high-ranking Russian diplomat told news agency Interfax that Moscow was “reconsidering” its cooperation with NATO after the Norwegian Defence Ministry said Wednesday Moscow had declared plans to “freeze all military cooperation” with the alliance.

Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Grushko was quoted by the agency as saying any review of relations would “of course affect the military cooperation program”.

Moscow is also furious over NATO ministers agreement to tighten ties with Georgia in anticipation of its future membership, which Russia vehemently opposes as a security threat.

In a related development, Russia’s top military general accused the Organization of Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Thursday of covering up Georgia’s military preparation ahead of last week’s offensive to re-take its breakaway region of South Ossetia.

“There are doubts over the OSCE’s role during the initial stage of the conflict. They were notified by the Georgian side that there would be an invasion, but did not warn Russian peacekeepers,” Colonel General Anatoly Nogovitsyn, the deputy chief of the Russian army general staff, alleged at briefing in Moscow.

“This fact makes us reconsider our relations… It is an obligation of the OSCE (to report on troop movements) and they must answer for it,” Nogovitsyn added.

At the same time, he said that Moscow would pull back its troops to a buffer zone along Georgia’s breakaway region of South Ossetia by Friday.

“The withdrawal has started at a pace that will have all the Russian Federation’s forces behind the line of our zone of responsibility by the end of Aug 22,” Colonel General Anatoly Nogovitsyn, deputy chief of the Russian army general staff, told a briefing in Moscow.