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Georgia: President Says Georgian Troops Control S.Ossetia

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  • Georgia: President Says Georgian Troops Control S.Ossetia

    GEORGIA: PRESIDENT SAYS GEORGIAN TROOPS CONTROL SOUTH OSSETIA

    EurasiaNet
    Aug 8 2008
    NY

    Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, addressing the nation via
    television August 8, indicated that Georgia had won the opening battle
    for control of the separatist territory of South Ossetia. The outcome
    of the war, however, remains very much in doubt.

    Clashes began August 7 between Georgian troops and South Ossetian
    separatists. [See related EurasiaNet story]. After nightfall,
    Saakashvili went on television to tell viewers that Georgian forces
    "completely control" Tskhinvali, the South Ossetian separatist capital,
    as well as "all population points and all villages" in the territory.

    The Georgian leader went on to call for national unity and attempted to
    cast the military operation as an unavoidable action amid the country's
    transformation from formerly Soviet republic to a Western-oriented
    democracy. "The fight for the future is worth fighting," he said. "If
    we stand together, there is no force that can defeat Georgia, defeat
    freedom, defeat a nation striving for freedom -- no matter how many
    planes, tanks, and missiles they use against us."

    It remains to be seen whether Georgia will be able to consolidate its
    battlefield gains. Russian leaders have vowed to punish Tbilisi, and
    Russian leader Dmitry Medvedev told state television that "the guilty
    will get the punishment they deserve." A Russian Defense Ministry
    spokesman announced that Russian troops have been dispatched to South
    Ossetia, nominally to support Russian peacekeeping troops already
    on the ground, the official RIA-Novosti news agency reported. In
    addition, witnesses have reported that dozens of Russian tanks
    and armored vehicles have moved into the conflict zone, along with
    hundreds of supposed "volunteers" ready to assist beleaguered South
    Ossetian separatist forces.

    According to Russian military sources, at least 10 Russian peacekeepers
    had been killed and 30 wounded during the initial Georgian thrust
    into the separatist-held territory, according to a RIA-Novosti report.

    As night fell over Tskhinvali, Georgian officials in Tbilisi and
    troops in South Ossetia braced for a Russian riposte. There were
    some early indications that the Kremlin might not limit its response
    to Ossetia. For example, the Rustavi-2 television station in Georgia
    reported late August 8 that jets coming from the direction of Armenia
    bombed a site in the southwestern Georgian hamlet of Bolnisi, not
    far from the borders with Azerbaijan and Armenia.

    Such reports are especially ominous, given that they portend a
    widening of the fighting. US President George W. Bush conferred with
    Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in Beijing on August 8. "We
    urge restraint on all sides -- that violence would be curtailed
    and that direct dialogue could ensue in order to help resolve their
    differences," White House spokeswoman Dana Perino told reporters.

    Some Georgian officials, including Georgian National Security
    Council chief Kakha Lomaia, have publicly compared Tbilisi's
    current predicament to that faced by Hungary in 1956 and the former
    Czechoslovakia in 1968, references to invasions carried out by
    Soviet military forces. Lomaia has announced that roughly half of
    the approximately 2,000 Georgian troops now in Iraq as part of the
    US-led coalition were being brought home to help contend with the
    domestic security crisis.

    Although the strategic situation late August 8 seemed favorable
    to Georgia, Saakashvili sounded as though his side was on the
    defensive. He conveyed a feeling that the challenges in the coming days
    will only mount for Georgia. "We will not give up, and we will achieve
    victory. I call on everyone to mobilize. I declare, here and now,
    a universal mobilization of the nation and the Republic of Georgia,"
    he said during his televised address. "I hereby announce that reserve
    officers are called up -- everyone must come to mobilization center
    and fight to save our country."
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