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  • Georgia unleashed an express war

    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say. Part B (Russia)
    July 16, 2004, Friday


    GEORGIA UNLEASHED AN EXPRESS WAR
    SOURCE: Kommersant, July 16, 2004, p. 10

    Vladimir Novikov, Alexander Gabuyev

    The latest round of talks within the framework of the Joint Control
    Commission in Moscow yesterday ended with nothing to show for it.
    Georgia has finally released the Russian relief aid it sezied. CIS
    Executive Secretary Vladimir Rushailo and Stephen Mann, the US
    president's travelling trouble-shooter, have visited Tbilisi.

    The envoys of Moscow and Washington envoy never expected to meet each
    other in Tbilisi. Both tried hard to make out that their visits were
    planned diplomatic events. Rushailo pointed out repeatedly that he
    regularly tours CIS capitals and "has just visited some Central Asian
    countries." Mann repeated over and over that he is not visiting
    Georgia alone, but "also Armenia and Azerbaijan to discuss
    Nagorno-Karabakh settlement there." Needless to say, the
    representatives of Moscow and Washington claimed in practically
    identical terms that their visits to Tbilisi had nothing to do with
    the situation in South Ossetia. Mann only said on the subject of
    South Ossetia that he had exhaustive information on the state of
    affairs and reiterated that "the United States supports a peaceful
    solution to the problem."

    Rushailo was more communicative. After meetings with President
    Mikhail Saakashvili and Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania he said that he
    had come to meet new leaders of Georgia and specify the date of the
    next CIS summit in Kazakhstan. Rushailo left the positive news for
    the end of the news conference. Rushailo said, "Emphasis in the talks
    with the president of Georgia was made on facilitation of integration
    with neighbors, first and foremost with Russia."

    A day before Rushailo's visit, however, Saakashvili was in London and
    made quite different statements there. "The West should continue
    putting pressure on Russia," he said. "We have to show Russia that
    Georgia will not be pushed around." Should the West follow the
    advice, according to Saakashvili, "several thousand people in South
    Ossetia will join Georgia within six months." Saakashvili even
    boasted that "the Georgian special forces trained by NATO instructors
    are better than any Russian unit."

    Georgia Express 2004 exercise, an element of the British program of
    military assistance to the Tbilisi regime and of the NATO's
    Partnership for Peace Program, began on July 3 as though to confirm
    Saakashvili's words. The exercise is taking place at the Vaziani base
    near Tbilisi, where almost 170 British and 230 Georgian servicemen,
    supported by two helicopters, have until July 18 to capture a village
    overrun by hypothetical guerrillas and protect journalists from
    terrorist attacks. Iraqi Shiites were chosen for the hypothetical
    enemy. This demonstration of strength must have had its effect. The
    South Ossetian government Tskhinvali is seriously afraid of an
    invasion.

    Meanwhile, the confrontation in Ergneti between Russian troops
    escorting relief aid to Ossetian villages and the Georgian financial
    police continued. Tbilisi went on claiming that the shipment must
    clear customs. Saakashvili eventually said that by way of exception
    he himself would pay the Finance Ministry. The convoy was about to
    continue on its way when the Ossetian side kicked up a scandal. The
    Ossetians demanded peacekeeping contingent commander Svyatoslav
    Nabzdorov to prevent the Georgian police from escorting the convoy.
    Leaving Ergneti, the trucks were supposed to cross the territory of
    Georgia before making a turn into South Ossetia, and Nabzdorov could
    not very well forbid the Georgian police from escorting the shipment
    on the territory of Georgia. It was a dead-end, and the sides got
    down to thoroughly unproductive negotiations again.

    Translated by A. Ignatkin
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