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Georgia demonstartes political, military skill in Kodori Gorge

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  • Georgia demonstartes political, military skill in Kodori Gorge

    GEORGIA DEMONSTRATES POLITICAL, MILITARY SKILL IN KODORI GORGE

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Aug 1, 2006

    By Vladimir Socor

    Georgian authorities are beginning to restore normal conditions
    for daily life in the upper Kodori Gorge, following the
    successful law-and-order operation on July 25-27 that forced the
    Moscow-manipulated rebel chieftain Emzar Kvitsiani to flee the area.

    The upper Kodori Gorge is the only part of pre-1992 Abkhazia's
    territory not controlled by the secessionist authorities.

    Conducted jointly by Georgia's Internal Affairs and Defense Ministries,
    the operation turned out to be remarkably clean, with only one civilian
    death, two policemen injured, and no known casualties among Kvitsiani's
    followers, a small number of whom have apparently made their way into
    Abkhaz-controlled territory. Russian propaganda clearly failed in its
    attempt to build up Kvitsiani into a spokesman for the Svan ethnic
    group that inhabits the Kodori Gorge.

    Most Defense Ministry personnel are already being withdrawn from the
    gorge in the wake of the successful operation. An Interior Ministry
    unit, reinforced by a small military element, is to be permanently
    stationed in Kodori in order to provide security for the population
    and prevent organized crime. Substantial arms caches have been
    found and continue to be discovered on a daily basis. According to
    intelligence data, Russian and Abkhaz special services had delivered
    weapons to Kvitsiani's group in March, presumably in preparation
    for the rebellion he had launched on July 22 against the Georgian
    government. At least some of the weapons apparently originated from
    Russia's base at Gudauta in Abkhazia, where the arms stockpile of the
    "Baghramian" Armenian battalion was ostensibly "robbed" and its rifles
    and grenade launchers sent up the gorge to Kvitsiani's group.

    Kvitsiani and his nephew Bacho Argvliani, who operated criminal
    rackets in the area, are being sought for investigation and trial.

    Russian television has twice interviewed Kvitsiani at an undisclosed
    location, presumably in Abkhazia. He used the interviews to urge
    Georgian soldiers and policemen to turn their arms against their
    commanders, ministers, and the Georgian president; and he continued
    urging "Mingrelians" to rise against the Georgian government -- a
    line intermittently used in Russian psychological warfare operations
    against Georgia since the early 1990s and that always fell flat.

    Reverting, moreover, to one of Moscow's themes familiar from the two
    anti-Chechen wars, Kvitsiani alleged in these interviews that "Arabs"
    and "Chechens" participated in the Georgian operation and that he
    also spotted a "Negro," presumably proving American involvement
    (Russian TV Channel One "Vremya," July 27; Imedi TV, July 30).

    Georgian authorities are currently distributing flour, sugar, vegetable
    oil, and other staples to Kodori residents as well as 200 lari ($115)
    in cash per household. The authorities are bringing construction
    materials into the gorge for an urgent program to rebuild schools,
    roads, a medical clinic, and a disused airport, as well as restoring
    bus service to Kodori from the rest of Georgia.

    The Tbilisi-backed legislative assembly and government of the pre-1992
    Autonomous Republic of Abkhazia is now moving from Tbilisi to the
    Kodori Gorge. It shall be headquartered temporarily in the village
    of Azhara, pending the construction of an appropriate building. These
    pre-1992 bodies represent Abkhazia's entire population, including its
    Georgian population, which had formed 45% of the total (to 17% Abkhaz)
    prior to the Russia-aided mass ethnic cleansing of Georgians. The
    relocation of these bodies from Tbilisi to the Kodori Gorge, within
    the pre-1992 Abkhazia's territory, amounts to a strong political
    signal that Georgia intends to reverse the outcome of that war,
    albeit through a political process. Georgia will probably support the
    participation of these two representative bodies in some role in the
    negotiations toward a political resolution of the conflict.

    In Sukhumi, delegations from Russia's North Caucasus and southern
    Russian regions held talks with the secessionist leadership in
    recent days, promising to send "thousands of volunteers" to support
    Abkhazia in the event of hostilities with Georgia. They declare that
    they would in that case reach Abkhazia and Georgia itself not only
    or not necessarily through Sukhumi (which would expose the Russian
    political authorities' complicity), but rather via Kabardino-Balkaria
    or Karachaevo-Cherkessia. In that case, however, the hand of Russia's
    secret services would be exposed. Although Tbilisi is determined not to
    initiate any such hostilities, Russian military intelligence may well
    use its experience at provoking clashes so as to discredit Georgia.

    In the aftermath of Georgia's successful operation, President
    Mikheil Saakashvili told the nation that a retreat from Kodori or
    negotiations with Kvitsiani (as the latter's handlers were seeking)
    "would have been the beginning of the end of Georgian statehood."

    Thanks to the skillful operation, however, Kvitsiani seems set to
    join the "brigade of political corpses" in a Russian safe haven.

    (Rustavi-2 TV, Mze TV, Kavkas-Press, Interfax, July 27-31)
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