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Politic / 26.08.2008 12:06 Bush presses Russia not to recognize Georgia regions
"I call on Russia's leadership to meet its commitments and not recognize these separatist regions," Bush said.
The White House on Monday pressed Russia not to recognize Georgia's rebel areas and said Vice President Dick Cheney, an staunch critic of Moscow, would visit the region to show U.S. support for former Soviet states. President George W. Bush said Georgia's borders must be respected after the Russian parliament called on the Kremlin to recognize two separatist regions -- South Ossetia and Abkhazia -- as independent states. "I call on Russia's leadership to meet its commitments and not recognize these separatist regions," Bush said. "Georgia's territorial integrity and borders must command the same respect as every other nation's, including Russia's," he said in a statement from his Texas ranch. Russia and Georgia, which hosts two major energy pipelines, fought a brief war this month after Tbilisi sent troops to try to retake South Ossetia, a pro-Moscow region that threw off Georgian rule in the 1990s. Russia responded with a massive counter-attack that overwhelmed Georgia's military, and then sent troops into Georgia proper, where some of them remain. The push by Russia's parliament to recognize South Ossetia and Abkhazia followed U.S. recognition of Kosovo's independence from Serbia in
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