Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Using Georgia To Target Russia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Using Georgia To Target Russia

    USING GEORGIA TO TARGET RUSSIA
    By Stephen Lendman

    Al-Arab
    13/08/2008 10:46:04

    After the Soviet Union's 1991 dissolution, Georgia's South Ossetia
    province broke away and declared its independence. So far it
    remains undiplomatically recognized by UN member states. It's been
    traditionally allied with Russia and wishes to reunite with Northern
    Ossetes in the North Ossetia-Alania Russian republic. Nothing so far
    is in prospect, but Russia appears receptive to the idea. And for
    Abkhazia as well, Georgia's other breakaway province. The conflict
    also has implications for Transdniestria, the small independent
    Russian-majority part of Moldova bordering Ukraine, and for
    Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan.

    Tensions arose and conflict broke out in late 1991. It resulted in
    a 1992 ceasefire to avoid a major confrontation with Russia, but
    things remained unsettled. Moscow maintains a military presence in
    the province as well as in Abkhazia and exerts considerable political
    and economic influence.

    Throughout the 1990s, intermittent conflict erupted but nothing on
    the order of early August 7 when Georgia acted with aggression against
    the S. Ossetian capital, Tskninvali.
Working...
X