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MOSCOW, August 19 (RIA Novosti) - A Russian-U.S...

MOSCOW, August 19 (RIA Novosti) - A Russian-U.S. agreement on military transit to Afghanistan will go into effect on September 6, although the United States has not made any requests yet, a Foreign Ministry spokesman said on Wednesday. Moscow and Washington signed the deal on military transit via Russian territory, both overland and by air, on July 6 during President Barack Obama"s visit to Russia. Andrei Nesterenko said the agreement would formally enter into force only after the "legal procedure" was finalized, adding that with regard to Russia that meant its ratification by parliament. Until then, he said, its implementation would only be provisional. He also said the United States had not as yet specified "transit parameters or plans." The official said Moscow operated on the assumption that "Russian-U.S. transit cooperation will become a significant contribution to ensuring security, stabilization and reconstruction of Afghanistan." The Russian foreign minister previously said Moscow would have the right to inspect U.S. military planes overflying its territory. Sergei Lavrov also said the U.S. planned to make 4,500 flights to Afghanistan via Russian airspace. Russia already has bilateral transit deals with Germany, France and Spain, and also signed an agreement with NATO in 2008 on rail transit of non-lethal supplies to Afghanistan. The U.S.-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) has about 64,500 troops in Afghanistan, including 30,000 from the United States, under a UN mandate to give security support to the Afghan government and stop the flow of drugs from the country. There are a total of 62,000 U.S. troops in the country, with that figure set to rise by 6,000.


Russia"s plans to integrate six smaller...

Russia"s plans to integrate six smaller airlines into the country"s flagship carrier Aeroflot is aimed at improving air safety and modernizing the domestic air fleet, but was likely to create one more monopolist, an expert said on Wednesday.


The Russian Supreme Court ruled on Thursday...

The Russian Supreme Court ruled on Thursday to shorten the prison terms of the two men convicted of the 1999 terrorist attacks on the Okhotny Ryad shopping mall and Intourist Hotel in Moscow.

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MOSCOW, November 26 (RIA Novosti) - Any...

"We are categorically against drawing parallels between Hitler"s regime and Stalinism," Vyacheslav Moshe Kantor told a RIA Novosti news conference.

"We do not defend Stalinism, but we see a fundamental difference between those responsible for the Holocaust and those who ended it."

The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe passed a Lithuanian resolution this summer that blamed both Stalinism and Nazism for the outbreak of World War II.

Kantor also asked Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to announce International Holocaust Day in Russia on January 27. The date marks the liberation of the Auschwitz concentration camp and is commemorated in many countries across the world.

The Moscow-born head of European Jews said the holiday should be renamed Day of the Soviet Army and Liberation of Auschwitz in honor of the Red Army troops who took part in the freeing of the death camp"s inmates.




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