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  • Saakashvili Praises Military Exercise

    SAAKASHVILI PRAISES MILITARY EXERCISE
    Misha Dzhindzhikhashvili

    The Moscow Times
    July 23 2008
    Russia

    Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili praised a joint military
    training program involving more than 1,000 U.S. Marines and soldiers
    at a former Soviet base, 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 Monday 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 United States 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 Captain James Haunty, 30, 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 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 Corporal Jonah Salyers, 23, 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."
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