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Little Benefit In OSCE Mission: Georgia Minister

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  • Little Benefit In OSCE Mission: Georgia Minister

    LITTLE BENEFIT IN OSCE MISSION: GEORGIA MINISTER
    By Julian Hale

    DefenseNews.com
    Aug 21 2008

    BRUSSELS - Georgian Foreign Minister Eka Tkeshelashvili has expressed
    doubt that the immediate deployment of 20 military monitoring
    officers to the areas adjacent to South Ossetia, as supported by
    the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE),
    will appreciably improve the environment.

    "Russia was successful in restricting their mandate so that they will
    have no opportunity to see what is going on in areas under Russian
    control," said Tkeshelashvili to members of the European Parliament
    at an extraordinary meeting of the Foreign Affairs Committee on
    Aug. 20. She added that observers would therefore not have the
    chance to see the destruction of villages and the ethnic cleansing
    of Georgians that is being completed.

    Land Warfare She said that bridges had been blown up or mined
    and that there would need to be an "extensive demining operation"
    after the Russians had withdrawn. Painting a bleak picture of the
    humanitarian situation in areas still under Russian control, she
    said that in addition to scarcities of food and medicine, looting,
    destruction of property and executions were ongoing.

    Tkeshelashvili indicated that Russia's naval blockade was still
    fully in place and was having an impact not just on Georgia but on
    Armenia, for which Georgia is a transit state. She said that Georgia
    had suffered cyberattacks on the president's Web site before and on
    other government information spaces during the Russian incursion.

    "This is not just a regional issue but an issue for the whole
    of Europe," said Tkeshelashvili at a press conference after the
    event. "Russia is reincarnating the notion of its sphere of influence
    and challenging Europe with the aggressive action it has taken."

    She was confident that Georgia would have a NATO Membership Action
    Plan soon if not membership in an accelerated fashion.

    She also said that there was "no sign of the withdrawal of Russian
    forces from Georgia" and that Russia had in fact "enlarged the
    territorial scope of its military operation."

    Tkeshelashvili added that EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana has
    clearly stated that Russian forces cannot be peacekeepers in a Georgia
    that it has invaded. She and Solana had discussed the possibility of
    an EU peacekeeping mission, she said.

    The chairman of the European Parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee,
    Jacek Saryusz-Wolski, said that the European Parliament was planning
    a debate in plenary in Strasbourg and was drafting a resolution on
    the issue. He expected members to recommend to EU states that they
    first send in observation forces and then peacekeeping forces.

    Tkeshelashvili also denounced the Russian talk of thousands of
    civilians having died in South Ossetia as "disinformation," referring
    to Human Rights Watch figures in the hundreds.
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