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Moscow on attack as desperate Georgian forces sue for peace

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  • Moscow on attack as desperate Georgian forces sue for peace

    Moscow on attack as desperate Georgian forces sue for peace

    The Times/UK
    August 11, 2008

    Tony Halpin in Gori Kevin O'Flynn in Moscow and James Bone in New York


    Georgia sued for peace with Russia yesterday but Moscow showed little
    sign of ending its military campaign over South Ossetia.

    President Saakashvili appealed for international support as he ordered
    troops to pull out of the region, called an immediate ceasefire and
    urged Russia to begin talks to end hostilities.

    In a televised address to the nation last night, the besieged leader
    said that the `existence of the Georgian state is under threat'.

    Russia continued its offensive in a day of intensifying military
    action, while Georgia faced the threat of a second front opening up in
    its other breakaway region of Abkhazia.


    Times Archive, 1924: The revolt in Georgia
    The movement against the Bolshevists is considered to be more than a
    mere rising. It is considered to be a war of independence

    President Medvedev, in Moscow, accused the Georgian leadership of
    genocide as Russian troops and tanks seized full control of the region.
    There was panic in the Georgian city of Gori, 17 miles (27km) from the
    border, last night as thousands of people fled, convinced that a
    Russian invasion was imminent.

    Russian aircraft twice bombed a military airfield eight miles from the
    Georgian capital Tbilisi, even after Mr Saakashvili made his20offer of a
    ceasefire. One Russian bomb exploded near the capital's civilian
    airport hours before Bernard Kouchner, the French Foreign Minister,
    arrived on an EU peace mission. France holds the EU presidency, and has
    cordial ties with Georgia.

    America, which trains the Georgian Army, condemned Russia's `dangerous
    and disproportionate actions' and warned the Kremlin that any further
    military escalation would have a `significant long-term impact' on
    relations.

    Zalmay Khalilzad, the US envoy to the United Nations, accused Russia of
    targeting civilians and waging a campaign of terror. His Russian
    counterpart, Vitali Churkin, said: `This is completely unacceptable,
    especially from the lips of a representative of a country whose actions
    we are aware of in Iraq, Afghanistan and Serbia.'

    The US threatened last night to force a vote at the UN on a resolution
    calling for an immediate ceasefire in Georgia despite the threat of a
    Russia veto. `The world needs to know that everyone is united. Russia
    is on the wrong side,' Mr Khalilzad said.

    Russia, a veto-bearing permanent member of the 15-nation council, said
    that a ceasefire call was not enough and demanded that Georgia pledge
    to renounce the use of force.

    Russia confirmed that it had received Mr Saakashvili's offer of a
    ceasefire, but said that Georgian troops were continuing to shell South
    Ossetia. Meanwhile, Georgia claimed that Russia had opened a second
    front in its military offensive in Abkhazia on the Black Sea coast.

    Moscow denied involvement, but Sergei Bagapsh, the Abkhaz President,
    said that he had sent 1,000 troops to force Georgian soldiers out of
    the Kodori Gorge, the only remaining part of the region not under
    separatist control. Russian television, however, reported that Russian
    troops were in Abkhazia and moving toward the Georgian border. Georgia
    accused Moscow of landing 4,000 troops in Abkhazia by ship after Russia
    sent its navy to the Black Sea coast. The ships later docked at a
    Russian port, though only after Ukraine gave warning that it would bar
    any vessels engaged in action against Georgia from returning to the
    Black Sea Fleet's home in Sevastopol.

    Russian jets bombed Gori, the Black Sea port of Poti and the airfield
    near Tbilisi, all outside the conflict zone in South Ossetia. Mr
    Saakashvili said that Russia planned to take over the whole of Georgia
    because it wanted `control over energy routes from Central Asia and the
    Caspian Sea'. Russia claimed that it had sunk a Georgian cruiser in the
    Black Sea.

    The West regards Georgia as a vital conduit for supplies of energy from
    Central Asia through pipelines that bypass Russia. The governments of
    Britain, the US, Germany, Italy, Poland and Canada have advised their
    citizens living in Georgia to seek safety in Armenia.
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