| February 2007 |
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The U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs approved a draft document Thursday promoting future NATO expansion eastward.
A tender to prospect the Sakhalin-III oil and gas project in the Far East will be held after bills on foreigners' participation in strategic enterprises are approved, the natural resources ministry said Thursday. 
Moscow may unilaterally abandon the agreement between Russia and the United States on the elimination of intermediate-range and shorter-range missiles, the chief of the General Staff said Thursday. 
Moscow warns against independence for the Serbian province of Kosovo, and will only support a resolution that meets the interests of both Kosovo and Serbia, a Russian Balkans envoy said Thursday. 
Russia's foreign minister sharply criticized the Estonian parliament Thursday for passing a bill that would open the way to the demolition of Soviet war memorials in Estonia, describing the move as a blunder and a disgrace.
A regional Russian court dropped copyright violation charges Thursday against a school principal who bought pirated software for his students and staff. 
Regional air-defense networks are key to building an integrated security system for the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), a loose association of former Soviet republics, a senior Russian military official said Thursday. 
Experts have removed flight recorders from the Challenger-850 plane that crashed at a Moscow airport Tuesday, and will hand them over to the International Aviation Committee, a committee spokesman said Thursday. 
Russia's flagship air carrier Aeroflot [RTS: AFLT] said Thursday it will replace its Tu-134 aircraft by 2008. 
The Parliament of Estonia approved a bill Thursday permitting the demolition of Soviet monuments in the country. 



