Putin thinks Israel 'pursuing wider goals'
July 15, 2006
1 hour, 12 minutes ago
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia - President Vladimir Putin said he thinks Israel is pursuing wider goals in its military campaign against Lebanon than the return of its two captured soldiers.
"However complicated the questions are, maximum efforts must be applied to resolve the situation in a peaceful way and I think all efforts have not been exhausted," Putin said early Sunday.
"However, it is our impression that aside from seeking to return the abducted soldiers, Israel is pursuing wider goals," he said at a midnight news conference after a dinner opening the summit of the Group of Eight industrialized nations. He did not elaborate.
Israel began military strikes against Lebanon on Wednesday, after Hezbollah militants captured two Israeli soldiers in a cross-border raid. As civilian deaths mount, diplomatic efforts to end the fighting have yet to get off the ground.
The issue is certain to dominate the G-8 summit, and differences between the leaders began to appear even before the annual meeting began.
U.S. President Bush, who met Saturday with Putin, has been outspoken in defending Israel and accusing Hezbollah — backed by
Syria and Iran — of igniting the crisis.
Putin agreed it was unacceptable to pursue goals using force, but said that "at the same time, we work under the assumption that the use of force should be balanced."
The G-8 countries — the United States, Russia, Japan, Germany, Britain, France, Italy and Canada — were expected to issue a declaration on the Lebanon crisis.
"We, the Russian side, regret ... that on the eve of the G-8 ... we see an escalation of the situation in the Middle East," Putin said Sunday.
On Iran, Putin indicated that Russia had not changed its opposition to sanctions, and he defended the country's right to pursue nuclear technology for peaceful purposes.
"The question is not about toughening our stance, but about finding common approaches — this is actually the most difficult, but can prove to be the most effective in solving the Iranian nuclear problem," he said.
Turning to other issues, Putin said the summit would address conflicts in former Soviet states. He said he had discussed the issue with Bush.
Putin said their talks focused mostly on Georgia, where tensions are rising over the separatist provinces of Abkhazia and most recently South Ossetia.
Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili, who visited Bush at the White House last week, has made it a priority to bring the two rebel regions back into the government fold. Russia, which has peacekeepers in the region, has provided support to the separatists — in part by issuing passports to their citizens.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060715/ap_on_re_eu/russia_putin_3
The ink of the learned is as precious as the blood of the martyr. For one drop of ink may make millions think.
Sorosization of Ukraine is bringing demise to them. Hordes of gook farmers from SE Asia are renting huge farmlands, harvesting several times a year, burning out the soil and moving on to the next farmland. They are destroying Ukraine's fertile soil like clouds of locusts. Ukrainian government is selling out their lands to the gooks for money. Local people are powerless and helpless of course. Many gooks settled in Ukraine and bringing their extended families as we speak. I heard this stuff from Ukranian WN friends and it sounds quite worrisome. Georgia will be the next to be broken into pieces and sold out to the nonwhite scum if the nationalists there don't do something abut it.