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  • Tbilisi wouldn't let go

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    October 13, 2006 Friday

    TBILISI WOULDN'T LET GO

    by Oleg Gorupai

    GEORGIA DOES NOT HONOR THE MILITARY SHIPMENTS TRANSIT ACCORD WITH
    RUSSIA; Georgia is making life as hard as possible for the Russian
    Army Group in the Caucasus.


    This Monday, Georgia introduced new rules for transit of shipments
    and personnel of the Russian 102nd Military Base across its
    territory. The 102nd Military Base of the Russian Army Group in the
    Caucasus is located in Gyumri, Armenia, and may therefore be reached
    only via Georgia. Tbilisi's latest decision concerns transit of
    military shipments, base personnel, and family members. The Georgian
    Defense Ministry wouldn't say exactly what changes have been
    introduced. Its officers only say that the Russian Defense Ministry
    is not supposed to approach the Georgian Defense Ministry on all
    involved issues.

    The Russian Duma ratified the accords "On organization of transit of
    Russian military shipments and personnel via Georgia" and "On
    withdrawal of Russian military bases and other objects of the Russian
    Army Group in the Caucasus from the territory of Georgia", last week.
    The parliament of Georgia ratified the documents too. The Georgian
    side apparently feels that it is entitled to unilateral amendment of
    the accords after their ratification by signatories' and national
    legislatures. It may complicate the process of withdrawal from
    Georgia.

    As a matter of fact, Georgia has been doing its best to prevent
    transit and withdrawal of Russian bases from its territory even
    before these latest developments. Under the terms of the existing
    accords, border and customs control of Russian shipments and
    personnel follows procedures stipulated by the Georgian legislation
    but Georgia in the meantime is not supposed to require any customs
    duties or taxes. Even so, the Georgian authorities did try to collect
    customs duties and taxes in the episodes when big landing ships of
    the Russian Navy sailed into the Batumi port to evacuate Russian
    military hardware. They even demanded a duty on the Russian armored
    vehicles withdrawn from the territory of Georgia on their own nearly
    hysterical insistence. Similarly outrageous episodes occur when
    military convoys bring food and fuel to Russian military bases.

    The situation with Russian military transit to the 102nd Military
    Base in Armenia is no better. In 2005, the Russian Defense Ministry
    forwarded to Georgia 270 requests for permission for Russian planes
    to flyover Georgia en route to Armenia. Only 80 permits were given,
    not one of them after March. Eighty-eight permits were required in
    2006. Georgia granted only nine of them. In other words, Georgia has
    all but blocked transit without so much as an explanation. Air
    transit is all that is left Russia at this point. Transit by
    railroads and highways is permitted by the existing accords too, but
    Georgia has put an end to it.

    Colonel General Alexander Skvortsov, Deputy Chief of the General
    Staff, does not think that Georgia may be counted on to honor the
    transit accords. "As for the accords, the situation is such that
    nothing may be guaranteed. Ratification of the accord put it into
    effect. In theory, Russia may officially demand that Georgia honor
    it. Still, I cannot give you any guarantees with regard to what
    Georgia will or won't do," Skvortsov told the Duma. He added that the
    Defense Ministry is looking for a roundabout ways of reaching the
    base in Armenia.

    Sergei Ivanov, Defense Minister and Deputy Premier, maintains
    meanwhile that the base withdrawal accord will be carried out.
    According to Ivanov, the last Russian soldier will leave the
    territory of Georgia in late 2008. As a matter of fact, Russia is
    actively evacuating merchandise from the 62nd Military Base in
    Akhalkalaki. More than 50% has already been evacuated but all of that
    cannot be done overnight. Merchandise has to be prepared for
    evacuation. It means that specialists and technicians should go to
    Akhalkalaki to do whatever is necessary.

    This is apparently what Georgia is out to prevent from happening.
    Tbilisi may even launch another round of the visa blockade of Russian
    servicemen the way it already did earlier this year. Count on the
    Georgian authorities to invent excuses to prevent the coming of the
    specialists who are supposed to prepare military hardware of the 62nd
    Military Base for withdrawal. Food and fuel convoys to objects of the
    Russian Army Group in the Caucasus will certainly encounter
    difficulties again.

    The "withdrawal accord" also stipulates establishment of the
    Russian-Georgian counter-terrorism center. Georgian Defense Minister
    Gela Bezhuashvili in the meantime says that the center cannot be
    established because of the state the relations between Tbilisi and
    Moscow are in. It means that official Tbilisi would stop at nothing
    to make life hard for servicemen of the Russian Army Group in the
    Caucasus carrying out the withdrawal. Shortly speaking, Georgia
    refuses to honor its commitments under the accord. Bezhuashvili is
    not telling the truth when he says that the document in question only
    stipulates Russian-Georgian consultations on the matter. Article 20
    of the Accord states that "the signatories pledge to prepare for the
    signing of an accord on establishment of the Russian-Georgian
    counter-terrorism center, a document in accordance with which a part
    of the personnel, materiel, and infrastructure of the Russian
    military base in Batumi agreed upon by the signatories will be used
    in the interests of the center."

    Ivanov says in the meantime that the Georgian leadership knows what
    should be done to normalize the relations with Russia. "We will judge
    by deeds, not rhetoric," Ivanov said.

    Source: Krasnaya Zvezda, October 10, 2006, p. 3
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