The European Union said on Monday it was ready to reopen talks with Russia on a long-term partnership agreement in spite of eastern European complaints that such a step would smack of weakness after the Kremlin’s de facto partition of Georgia.
By Tony Barber in Brussels
Published: November 10 2008 10:13 | Last updated: November 10 2008 17:27
The European Union said on Monday it was ready to reopen talks with Russia on a long-term partnership agreement in spite of eastern European complaints that such a step would smack of weakness after the Kremlin’s de facto partition of Georgia.