Putin says Russia close to deal on Georgia bases

Moscow and Tbilisi are close to a deal on the withdrawal of Russian army bases in Georgia that have long soured relations between…

Moscow and Tbilisi are close to a deal on the withdrawal of Russian army bases in Georgia that have long soured relations between the two neighbours, the Kremlin said today.

A Kremlin statement said Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili phoned his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin to discuss a time-scale for the withdrawal of the bases, which Saakashvili has likened to occupation.

"The Russian president emphasised the importance of reaching a compromise over the time-scale, as Russia and Georgia have almost done, taking into account the requirements of ensuring an organised and civilised withdrawal," the statement said.

NATO-hopeful Georgia has demanded Russia pull out in 2008, but Moscow has said it needs more time to arrange logistics and financing for new sites for the withdrawn soldiers.

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Recent weeks have seen the dispute heat up, with Georgia's parliament demanding the bases be blockaded if a deal was not reached. Russia's parliament responded by saying diplomatic ties should be broken if the bases were threatened.

Georgian parliament speaker Nino Burjanadze, a close Saakashvili ally, said 10 days ago Russia was moving closer to Georgia's demand that troops leave in 2008.

Russia pulled out of a base near Tbilisi under a deal signed in Istanbul in 1999, but has dragged its feet over the other two bases near the border with NATO-member Turkey.