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Russia may use Air Force to protect its peacekeepers in Georgia

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  • Russia may use Air Force to protect its peacekeepers in Georgia

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    Oct 13 2006

    Russia may use Air Force to protect its peacekeepers in Georgia
    15:52 | 13/ 10/ 2006



    MOSCOW, October 13 (RIA Novosti) - Russia may use its Air Force in
    the event of a Georgian attack on Russian peacekeepers stationed in
    the Georgian breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, the
    Russian Air Force commander said Friday.

    Commenting on recent tensions between Russia and Georgia last Sunday,
    Sergei Ivanov, the Russian defense minister and a deputy prime
    minister, said Russia would not remain indifferent in the event
    Georgia attacked Russian peacekeepers or citizens, either in South
    Ossetia or in Abkhazia.

    "If the minister said that we [Russia] would certainly take adequate
    measures, than he probably meant the use of air, naval and land
    forces," Vladimir Mikhailov said.

    South Ossetia and Abkhazia declared independence from Georgia
    following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, unleashing bloody
    conflicts in the region. Russia mediated ceasefire agreements between
    the sides, and Russian peacekeepers have been deployed in the
    conflict zones ever since.

    On Friday, Russia asked the UN Security Council to draft a resolution
    on Georgia demanding an extension of the mandate for its peacekeepers
    in Abkhazia until April 15, 2007.

    Since President Mikheil Saakashvili came to power in Georgia on the
    back of the 2003 "Rose Revolution," both the government and
    parliament have sought to remove Russian peacekeepers from the
    conflict zones of the two self-proclaimed republics, and to force the
    withdrawal of Russian troops from two Soviet-era bases that are due
    to close in 2008.

    Mikhailov also said Russia could also use military transport aviation
    for the withdrawal of military hardware and personnel from its two
    bases in Georgia.

    "If necessary, we will use military transport planes, which could
    land in Adler [a Russian city on the Black Sea] or in other airports
    to get the job done," Mikhailov said.

    Part of the military equipment being removed from Russian bases in
    Georgia will be transferred to the Gyumri base when Russia completes
    its withdrawal from Akhalkalaki and Batumi by the end of 2008.

    The Russian 102nd military base in Gyumri, about 120 kilometers (75
    miles) from the Armenian capital Yerevan, is part of a joint air
    defense system of the Commonwealth of Independent States, which was
    deployed in Armenia in 1995.

    Authorities in Georgia charged four Russian officers with spying last
    Wednesday, but released them Monday to defuse what was becoming a
    mounting crisis. An enraged Moscow responded by suspending all
    transportation and mail links with Georgia, while police targeted
    illegal immigrants and businesses suspected of maintaining links with
    the Georgian criminal underworld.
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