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U.S. Troops Train Georgians Amid Tension

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  • U.S. Troops Train Georgians Amid Tension

    U.S. TROOPS TRAIN GEORGIANS AMID TENSION

    The Associated Press State & Local Wire
    July 21, 2008 Monday 5:56 PM GMT

    By DOUGLAS BIRCH and MISHA DZHINDZHIKHASHVILI, Associated Press Writers

    President Mikhail Saakashvili praised a joint military training
    program involving more than 1,000 U.S. Marines and soldiers at a
    former Soviet base Monday, amid heightened tensions with Moscow.

    The effort, involving 600 Georgian troops, shows that Georgia has "the
    best trained and equipped army" in the strategic Caucasus mountain
    region, Saakashvili said in comments broadcast on Georgian television.

    While the exercise was planned months ago, it followed sporadic clashes
    between Georgians and separatists in Abkhazia and South Ossetia,
    breakaway regions closely tied to Russia. And it comes amid friction
    over Georgia's bid for NATO membership, viewed by Moscow as hostile.

    Georgia has about 2,000 troops in Iraq making it the third largest
    contributor to coalition forces after the U.S. and Britain but plans
    to end the Iraq operation by the end of this year.So far, five Georgian
    soldiers have died in the conflict.

    Marine Capt. James Haunty, 30, of Columbus, Ohio, commander of Lima
    Company, 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines, said Friday that he was keeping
    an eye on the simmering conflicts in Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

    "I'm not concerned about anything serious happening as long as
    there are U.S. troops here in Georgia," Haunty said, shortly before
    50-caliber machine gun bullets began peppering a hillside at the
    Vaziani training complex, about 6 miles (10 kilometers) east of the
    capital. "But we still will monitor the situation."

    The U.S. soldiers, Marines and airmen arrived in Tbilisi in mid-July
    to teach combat skills to Georgian soldiers, as well as 30 troops
    from Armenia, Azerbaijan and Ukraine. The program, called Exercise
    Immediate Response 2008, includes simulated attacks from roadside
    bombs and other challenges troops might expect in Iraq, Haunty said.

    Lance Cpl. Jonah Salyers, 23, of Columbus, Ohio, a Marine reservist,
    said it was his first trip outside of the United States and conceded
    that he might not have been able to find the republic of Georgia on
    a map.

    "I could have found the state, I'll tell you that," he said Friday.

    Pointing to the snowcapped Caucasus mountains to the north, Salyers
    said: "Obviously the countryside is absolutely beautiful."

    Cpl. Georgi Adaze, 21, who joined Georgia's 4th Infantry Brigade
    seven months ago, said he enjoyed working with the American troops. "I
    am ready to serve my country and get military experience," he said,
    in an interview closely monitored by two Georgian military officers.

    Georgia, which was ruled by Moscow for most of the two centuries
    preceding the breakup of the Soviet Union, has angered Russia by
    seeking NATO membership a bid Moscow regards as part of a Western
    effort to weaken its influence in the region.

    In January, Georgian defense officials began to phase out use of
    the Russian-designed Kalashnikov rifle and introduce the American
    M-16. Georgian troops were training mostly with American weapons on
    two gunnery ranges Friday. Many NATO countries use the M-16.

    Georgia's government also decided earlier this year to increase the
    size of its armed forces from about 32,000 to 37,000.

    Russia, meanwhile, has strengthened ties in recent months to the two
    Georgian separatist regions, which Saakashvili has pledged to bring
    back under Tbilisi's control. No U.N. member state recognizes Abkhazia
    or South Ossetia's claims to sovereignty.

    The current round of tensions have led to clashes in recent months
    between Georgian authorities and separatists, including a July
    9 skirmish on Abkhazia's de-facto border that injured two Abkhaz
    separatist troops and three Georgian policemen.

    Russian fighter jets circled over South Ossetia during a visit to
    Tbilisi by U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice earlier this
    month. Later, Georgia threatened to shoot down any Russian planes
    that violated its air space.

    The same day Immediate Response began, the Russian military announced
    that it had launched its own military training exercise in its nearby
    North Caucasus region. A spokesman for the Russian Defense Ministry
    denied there was any connection between those exercises and the
    U.S.-Georgian training effort.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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