Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Visa cul-de-sac: Tbilisi denies Russian servicemen visas

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

  • Visa cul-de-sac: Tbilisi denies Russian servicemen visas

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    August 24, 2005, Wednesday

    VISA CUL-DE-SAC

    SOURCE: Krasnaya Zvezda, No 151, August 20, 2005, p. 3

    by Oleg Gorupai


    TBILISI DENIES RUSSIAN SERVICEMEN VISAS


    Visas become more and more of a problem for servicemen of the Russian
    Army Group in the Caucasus with each passing day. Military bases (the
    12th in Batumi and 62nd in Akhalkalaki) are more than 50% under
    complement. Unless urgent measures are taken, a critical situation
    will arise with availability of low-rank officers of the platoon,
    company, and battalion (battery) levels. Officers drafted into the
    Armed Forces for two years after military departments in civilian
    colleges and universities have served their army stint. Almost 350
    officers like that are to be retired from the Army (from the Russian
    Army Group in the Caucasus, that is) by the end of the year. They are
    supposed to be replaced with new graduates from civilian colleges and
    universities. Russian Embassy in Georgia submitted appropriate
    documents for 96 replacements well in advance.

    The Georgian authorities, however, deny servicemen of the Russian
    Army Group in the Caucasus both one-time and multiple entry and exit
    visas. Their motives are impeccable: there will be no visas for the
    Russian military before the official signing of the accord on
    withdrawal of the Russian bases from Georgia. Exceptions are made
    only for the servicemen directly involved in withdrawal of the
    military hardware and not all of them at that.

    Almost 197 graduates from civilian colleges and universities have
    already come to the 102nd Military Base of the Russian Army Group in
    the Caucasus quartered in Armenia. All of them were put up in
    barracks, all of them are eager to serve in the Russian army. Some of
    them will undergo a three-week refresher course, others two-month
    courses. And what then?

    The visa situation being what it is, command of the Russian Army
    Group in the Caucasus is left to its own devices. After two months of
    kicking their heels in Armenia, the unemployed officers are offered
    vacancies in Armenia. The rest will be assigned to the 12th and 62nd
    bases in Georgia but remain in Armenia pending solution to the
    problem of visas.

    There can be no doubts that the command of the Russian Army Group in
    the Caucasus and 102nd Base will find something to do for the
    officers but that is hardly a solution as far as bases in Georgia are
    concerned. They need officers - at least in order to withdraw from Georgia.
Working...
X