U.S Vice-President, Dick Cheney
has condemned what he called Russia’s "illegitimate" attempt to change
Georgia’s borders last month.
Mr. Cheney added that Russia’s
actions during the recent conflict with Georgia had cast doubt on its
reliability as an international partner.
He also said the US was fully
committed to Georgia’s efforts to join Nato.
Mr. Cheney was in Tbilisi a day
after the US announced a $1bn (£564m) aid package to help rebuild
Georgia.
Russia’s actions have cast grave
doubt on Russia’s intentions and on its reliability as an
international partner
The conflict between Georgia and
Russia erupted on August 7, after Georgia tried to retake the
breakaway region of South Ossetia by force.
Russian forces launched a
counter-attack and the conflict ended with the ejection of Georgian
troops from South Ossetia and another breakaway region, Abkhazia.
Russia has since recognised the
independence of both regions, and earlier this week dismissed Georgian
President Mikhail Saakashvili as a "political corpse" whose leadership
it did not recognise.
Mr. Cheney was speaking at a
news briefing in Tbilisi, standing beside President Saakashvili.
"After your nation won its
freedom in the Rose Revolution, America came to the aid of this
courageous young democracy," Mr. Cheney said.
"We are doing so again as you
work to overcome an invasion of your sovereign territory and an
illegitimate unilateral attempt to change your country’s borders by
force that has been universally condemned by the free world.
"Russia’s actions have cast
grave doubt on Russia’s intentions and on its reliability as an
international partner - not just in Georgia but across this region
and, indeed, throughout the international system," he added.
Georgia has been a significant
troop contributor to US operations in Iraq, and it is a key link in
the only energy export route from Central Asia westwards that does not
pass through Russian territory.
However, the aid package
announced on Wednesday is limited to helping re-settle refugees and
rebuild Georgia’s infrastructure, and the BBC’s diplomatic
correspondent Jonathan Marcus says it remains unclear how far the US
and its Nato allies are prepared to go in re-arming its military.
On Wednesday, the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) also announced that Georgia was to receive a $750m
(£422m) loan.
Russian President Dmitry
Medvedev has accused the US of helping Tbilisi build its war machine,
and criticised its decision to send humanitarian aid to Georgia aboard
military ships.
Faced with a chorus of
international calls for Russia’s isolation as a result of the war, Mr.
Medvedev said Moscow did not fear being expelled from the G8 group of
rich nations nor did it fear Nato cutting ties with his country.
Early this week, EU leaders
agreed to suspend talks on a new partnership agreement with Moscow
until Russian troops had withdrawn from Georgia, but they did not
threaten sanctions.
Mr. Cheney, who was in
Azerbaijan on Wednesday, was billed to end his tour of the region in
Ukraine yesterday.