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Georgia Protests Russian Military Drills In North Caucasus

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  • Georgia Protests Russian Military Drills In North Caucasus

    GEORGIA PROTESTS RUSSIAN MILITARY DRILLS IN NORTH CAUCASUS

    RIA Novosti
    July 16, 2008
    Russia

    Russia's large-scale military exercises in the North Caucasus is
    another manifestation of aggression against Tbilisi, the Georgian
    Foreign Ministry said Wednesday.

    The exercise, dubbed Caucasus Frontier 2008, entered its active stage
    Tuesday and involves units of the North Caucasus Military District,
    mainly the 58th Army, the 4th Air Force Army, Interior Ministry troops,
    and border guards.

    The ministry criticized earlier statements by Col. Gen. Sergei
    Makarov, the commander of Russia's North Caucasus Military District,
    who said that among other things the troops would practice assistance
    to Russian peacekeepers stationed in Georgia's separatist Abkhazia
    and South Ossetia regions.

    "The statements made by the Russian Defense Ministry and high-ranking
    military officials can be regarded only as a direct threat of military
    intervention and aggression against a sovereign state," the ministry
    said in a statement.

    The statement added that Tbilisi "insistently calls on Russia to
    restrain from irresponsible statements and put an end to aggressive
    politics aimed against Georgia."

    Lt. Col. Andrei Bobrun, an aide to the North Caucasus Military District
    commander, said earlier that the main aim of the exercises was to
    practice interoperability between federal troops, Interior Ministry
    troops, border guards, and the Air Force in special operations against
    militants and in the defense of Russia's international borders.

    Georgia together with the United States also began large-scale
    military exercises Tuesday, Immediate Response 2008, near its capital
    of Tbilisi.

    A total of 1,650 personnel, including troops from Armenia, Azerbaijan
    and Ukraine, are taking part in the $8 million drills, planned by the
    U.S. Armed Forces European Command and financed by the U.S. Defense
    Department.

    Relations between Russia and Georgia plunged to a new low recently
    against the backdrop of violence in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, which
    broke away from Tbilisi in the early 1990s. Russian support for the
    separatist republics and Georgia's bid to join NATO have exacerbated
    the tension.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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