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Georgian Blitzkrieg fails. This can become a lesson to Azerbaijan

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  • Georgian Blitzkrieg fails. This can become a lesson to Azerbaijan

    Hayots Ashkharh , Armenia
    Aug 9 2008


    The Georgian Blitzkrieg fails. This can become a lesson to Azerbaijan
    as well



    The Georgian army took control of two regions of South Ossetia and the
    capital Tskhinvali in just a few hours as a result of a large-scale
    attack initiated by Georgia on the night of 7-8 August.


    The international community expressed an ambiguous approach to the
    large-scale attack initiated by Georgia. Only a few standard
    peace-loving statements were made. The debates at the UN General
    Council, initiated at Russia's demand, did not produce any
    results. The Georgian authorities first announced to the whole world
    that they were forced to take these actions - to put an end to
    provocations in the conflict region.

    Some time later such statements were replaced by explanations about
    "restoring constitutional order" and "destroying the criminal
    administration in Tskhinvali". Even Tbilisi's intentions of providing
    large financial aid to the South Ossetian population were announced.

    But only in the first hours, in the afternoon of 8 August at about
    1500-1600 [local time], sources in South Ossetia and Russia started to
    report the retreat of the Georgian troops from the South Ossetian
    capital Tskhinvali. The Georgian news agencies have not denied these
    reports for the time being.

    [Passage omitted: description of the Russian media behaviour while
    covering the events]

    Such a course of events shows that the Georgian Blitzkrieg, which was
    initially quite successful, has already failed, and [Georgian
    President Mikheil] Saakashvili's administration is facing a difficult
    dilemma. Georgia can still slow down the course of the hostilities by
    announcing nationwide mobilization, but it is obvious that its
    military defeat is predetermined.

    Moreover, it is cannot be ruled out that units of South Ossetia and
    the Russian volunteers who have joined them will occupy the Georgian
    villages that are not controlled by Tskhinvali and even enter
    Georgia's territory. Besides, Abkhazia's army has been mobilized and
    has come closer to the border with Georgia. Its clash with the
    Georgian troops is being prevented for the time by the peacekeepers
    stationed in the area of the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict. Consequently,
    only international intervention, first of all by the USA and the EU,
    can get Georgia out of this situation with credit. However, to this
    end the Georgian side should first of all halt the attack, withdraw
    its detachments from South Ossetia, which is not the case for the time
    being.

    The hostilities, which started in South Ossetia, are of interest to
    Armenia as this is the first serious attempt to settle a conflict in a
    military way in the Caucasus. Azerbaijan also already masters the
    political technologies and PR tools that were used in it.

    The Azerbaijani government has repeatedly announced its intention to
    settle the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict in a military way. Now that
    Georgia initiated its first serious attempt to occupy South Ossetia on
    the example of Serbian Krajina, the further behaviour of our neighbour
    Azerbaijan will largely depend on its final results.

    If South Ossetia, which is weaker than Nagornyy Karabakh, manages to
    withstand this ordeal, the first attempt to turn the South Caucasus
    into Balkans will fail, which cannot but serve as a lesson to
    Azerbaijan as well.

    Although the Armenian government is prudently maintaining its
    neutrality in regard of the large-scale war started in South Ossetia,
    it is clear that the issue of its outcome is of great importance to
    Armenia. The military-political situation in the South Caucasus,
    unlike that in the Balkans, shows that an attempt to exact revenge on
    an opponent in a military way encounters counteraction from forces
    interested in the region.

    The hostilities that have started in South Ossetia are becoming a
    peculiar "political text" in the issue of selecting peaceful or
    military ways of settling conflicts in the South Caucasus. We hope
    that the expected failure of Georgia's attempt to solve the conflict
    in a military way will become a lesson to Azerbaijan and will prevent
    senseless attempts to solve political issues in a military way.

    [translated from Armenian]
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