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    AFP/GETTY IMAGES
    James Morrison

    Washington Times
    Wednesday, August 13, 2008
    DC

    As Russian troops raged through Georgia, the country's tiny diplomatic
    corps in Washington mounted a round-the-clock offensive to tell
    Georgia's side of the story to administration officials, congressional
    contacts and journalists.

    "The embassy has been working 24 hours a day," Tamta Kupradze,
    the political officer, told Embassy Row on Tuesday. "We've made
    phone calls, held meetings, contacted the media to counter Russian
    propaganda."

    Georgian Ambassador Vasil Sikharulidze, who is also Georgia's envoy
    to Canada, gave interviews to anyone who would listen, from Fox News
    to CNN to Canadian television.

    He met with a U.S. government task force on Georgia and maintained
    regular telephone contacts with the State Department, Miss Kupradze
    said.

    "There's been no time to go home. We've been sleeping in the embassy,"
    she said. "These are the toughest days of my life."

    Miss Kupradze, who has been filling in for a vacationing press
    spokesman, said much of the early media coverage was biased because
    reporters were relating Russia's version of the conflict that started
    over the breakaway, pro-Russian South Ossetia region of Georgia.

    Of the embassy's 10 diplomats, three returned earlier this summer
    for a vacation in Georgia and cannot get out of the country to return
    to Washington.

    HOPE IN SUDAN

    The U.S. special envoy to Sudan expressed a measure of hope Tuesday
    that the United Nations will meet its commitment to deploy an adequate
    number of peacekeepers to stop what President Bush has called the
    "genocide" against black Africans by Arab militias.

    Washington remains disappointed by the current level of peacekeepers,
    but "we have reason to be encouraged and hopeful that the pace of
    the past will be reversed," envoy Richard Williamson told reporters
    in Khartoum after meeting with Foreign Minister Deng Alor.

    "The current trickle of added peacekeepers is very disappointing,"
    Mr. Williamson said. "Unfortunately, performance has not been
    acceptable to date. Unfortunately, the responsibility rests both here
    [in Sudan] and also with the United Nations."

    More than 8,000 troops and 1,700 police officers are operating in
    Sudan, which is far below the authorized level of 19,500 soldiers and
    6,500 policemen, according to a U.N. spokesman. He said a vanguard
    of 350 Ethiopian soldiers is due next week to prepare for an entire
    battalion of about 1,000 troops.

    The United Nations estimates that 300,000 people have been killed
    and 2.2 million displaced from their homes because of fighting in
    the Sudanese region of Darfur since 2003.

    Mr. Williamson added that "the developments in 2008" have
    brought a "new focus and attention" to dispute within the Sudanese
    government. The most important of those developments was the World
    Court indictment of President Omar Bashir on war crimes charges.

    "But let me emphasize, and this is terribly important: If we're going
    to get a sustainable peace in Darfur, in the end the sovereign state
    of Sudan will have to address this issue," Mr. Williamson added.

    ARMENIA BOUND

    Career diplomat Marie L. Yovanovitch is due to arrive in Armenia next
    month as the U.S. ambassador the Eurasian nation.

    Miss Yovanovitch, who won Senate confirmation Aug. 1, is the former
    ambassador to Kyrgyzstan. She also has served as senior adviser to
    the undersecretary of state for political affairs and as deputy chief
    of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Ukraine.
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