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As UN Stalls on Georgia, Talk of Oil Pipelines and Armenia Airbases

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  • As UN Stalls on Georgia, Talk of Oil Pipelines and Armenia Airbases

    Inner City Press, NY
    Aug 9 2008


    As UN Stalls on Georgia, Talk of Oil Pipelines and Armenia Airbases

    Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner City Press at the UN: News Analysis


    UNITED NATIONS, August 9 -- With explosions all over Georgia, Russian
    and U.S. representatives were similarly downbeat on the chances for
    the Security Council to adopt the three sentence statement they've
    spent two days and nights negotiating. Facts have changed too quickly
    on the ground for the draft press statement, submitted Thursday night
    by Russia, to have much chance of passing. Outside the Council
    chamber, a well-placed diplomat clutching a Blackberry told Inner City
    Press that the conflict's impact on the BTC pipeline is the talk of
    oil-trading circles. The T in the middle is Tblisi, Georgia's capital.

    At Friday's UN noon briefing, Ban Ki-moon's spokesperson Michele
    Montas was asked what calls, if any, Ban had made about the conflict.
    "None," Ms. Montas said. "He hasn't done any special effort today to
    try to reach people since the Security Council is right now examining
    the situation." Inner City Press asked, How about Vijay Nambiar, who
    was at the Council's meeting Thursday night? Ms. Montas answered, "No,
    we haven't done anything specific because, as I said, it is a matter
    right now in the hands of the Security Council and we'll leave it to
    the Security Council." Transcript here. And what of UN Political
    chief, the American Lynn Pascoe, present at Friday's fruitless
    meeting?


    Amb. Churkin and team in the Council, cheese on a string not shown

    As the acting chief of UN Peacekeeping, Edmund Mulet, Saturday
    briefed the Council behind closed doors, presumably on the spillover
    of the conflict from South Ossetia to Abkhazia and the Kodori Gorge, a
    Georgian diplomat told Inner City Press he was multitasking, trying to
    arrange for a car to take his family from their misbegotten vacation
    spot in the Georgian countryside back to the capital, Tblisi. "I don't
    know what the next step after that would be," he said. He was also
    spinning, telling Inner City Press that Russia is flying bombing raid
    from out of a rented airbase in Armenia. "It's very bad," he
    said. "Georgia has had good relations with Armenia." But what about
    Nagorno-Karabakh, one wag wondered?

    He said that Georgia has shot down six Russian planes. Are you
    holding any pilots? Four or five, he said. They will come in handy.

    One reporter analogized the situation to the cartoon in which a cat
    jumps for a piece of cheese on a string, and get slapped. South
    Ossetia was the cheese, Georgia was the cat, and Russia is now
    slapping.

    http://www.innercitypress.com/unsc4 sossetia080908.html
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