Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Russian-Georgian tensions escalate

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Russian-Georgian tensions escalate

    News & Analysis
    Europe
    Russia & the former USSR

    Russian-Georgian tensions escalate
    By Simon Wheelan
    13 August 2004

    There is mounting evidence that London and Washington are encouraging
    the Georgian government to challenge Russia's presence in the
    breakawayrepublics of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Strategically
    situated between the Black Sea and the oil-rich Caspian, and sitting
    astride two key oil and gas pipelines, Georgia borders Russia, Turkey,
    Azerbaijan and Armenia.

    Since being installed in power following a US-backed coup last
    December which usurped former President Eduard Shevardnadze, Georgia's
    President Mikhail Saakashvili has made clear that he intends to
    reunify his fractured republic by force if necessary.

    Having wrested back control over the coastal region of Adjaria and the
    major port of Batumi in May, Georgia has stepped up its threats
    against Abkhazia and there have been reports that its troops are
    massing on the border with South Ossetia where Russian troops are
    stationed.

    In the early hours of Thursday August 12, at least three people where
    killed after an exchange of fire on the Georgian side of the border,
    near the village of Eredi. South Ossetia said that Georgian forces had
    opened fire first, injuring seven people on its side of the
    border. But a Russian colonel was initially quoted as stating that
    South Ossetia had fired first, although he later changed his account.

    The deaths come after tensions between Tbilisi and Moscow had reached
    new depths in the last weeks. On July 20, Saakashvili threatened to
    renounce the 12-year-old deal whereby Georgian, Russian and South
    Ossetian forces have patrolled the breakaway republic. And on Tuesday
    August 3, Saakashvili announced on television that his forces were
    ready to attack ships that `illegally' enter the waters off Abkhazia.

    Georgia lost control of the waters over a decade ago. Nonetheless
    Saakashvili warned, `I earlier ordered... that we should immediately
    open fireon, and sink, every ship which enters Abkhazia.'

    The Black Sea coast is a popular destination for Russian holidaymakers
    arriving by boat from the nearby Russian resort of Sochi. Russian
    tourists should ` pay attention' to his words, Saakashvili
    threatened. Just days earlier a Georgian patrol boat had fired at a
    civilian vessel in the Black Sea.

    A Russian foreign minister said that the threats showed `Tbilisi wants
    to play with fire'. In a statement Moscow warned, `Any attempts to
    injure or threaten the lives of Russian citizens will receive the
    necessary rebuff.'

    Just two days after making his provocative remarks, Saakashvili was
    meeting with US Secretary of State Colin Powell in Washington. Despite
    claiming that he wanted to avoid any confrontation with Russia, and
    was seeking to `calm tensions', Saakashvili again warned Russian
    tourists that, `Abkhazia is no place for rest. It is a war zone, from
    where 300,000 Georgians have been expelled '.

    Saakashvili has boasted of his daily contact with Powell and US
    National Security adviser Condolezza Rice and obviously feels
    emboldened by his links with the western powers. In recent months
    Georgia has strengthened its tieswith NATO and has received some $1
    billion in aid from the European Union.

    Tbilisi has demanded that its forces control the South Ossetian
    entrance to the tunnel beneath the Caucasus linking North Ossetia, in
    Russia, to South Ossetia in Georgia, supposedly to clamp down on the
    trade in contraband.

    Exacerbating this potentially explosive situation is the fact that
    British and US military forces are currently involved in training the
    Georgian army, effectively inciting them to challenge the Russian
    presence in the breakaway republics.

    During his visit to London last month for talks with Prime Minister
    Tony Blair, Saakashvili stated brazenly that, `Britain is becoming
    more involved in the region and not only on the (Trans-Caucasus)
    pipeline. We just had last week joint training of UK Special Forces
    together with the Georgian armyâ=80=9D.

    Saakashvili boasted that Britain was now the third biggest contributor
    to the Georgian armed forces after the US and Turkey.

    According to the Times newspaper, it is believed that approximately
    160 British troops are involved in training Georgian forces. Simulated
    military operations, named the `Georgian Express 2004', took place
    July 5-18 at a military base in Vaziani. During exercises soldier's
    practised techniques in establishing checkpoints and patrols-all of
    which have been essential to the Georgian army's recent incursions
    into South Ossetia.

    In a qualitative deepening of the relationship between Tbilisi and
    London, Saakashvili also revealed that British General Sir Garry
    Johnson was now permanently based in the Georgian Defence Ministry to
    co-ordinate ongoing military assistance. A light infantry detachment
    took part in exercises with Georgian commandos and further exercises
    are scheduled with British advisers training Georgian officers and
    NCOs.

    Earlier in the year the Pentagon decided to privatise its military
    presence in Georgia by contracting the work to a group of retired US
    military officers.

    At the time a senior western diplomat told the Guardian newspaper,
    `One of the goals is to make the army units capable of seizing and
    defending a given objective'.

    The US has maintained a presence in Georgia since 2002 when military
    trainers and advisers arrived in the country, ostensibly to combat Al
    Qaeda forces said to be in the Georgian Pankisi Gorge on the border
    with Chechnya. World Socialist Web Site
Working...
X