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  • US searching for DoS officials who incited Georgia to aggression

    PanARMENIAN.Net

    U.S. searching for State Department officials who incited Georgia to
    aggression against South Ossetia
    04.10.2008 15:44 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ A new front has opened between Georgia and Russia,
    now over which side was the aggressor whose military activities early
    last month ignited the lopsided five-day war. At issue is new
    intelligence, inconclusive on its own, that nonetheless paints a more
    complicated picture of the critical last hours before war broke out,

    According to the publication, Georgia has released intercepted
    telephone calls purporting to show that part of a Russian armored
    regiment crossed into South Ossetia nearly a full day before Georgia's
    attack on the capital, Tshkinvali, late on Aug. 7.

    The intercepts circulated last week among intelligence agencies in the
    United States and Europe, part of a Georgian government effort to
    persuade the West and opposition voices at home that Georgia was under
    invasion and attacked defensively. Georgia argues that as a tiny and
    vulnerable nation allied with the West, it deserves extensive military
    and political support.

    The back and forth over who started the war is already an issue in the
    American presidential race, with Governor Sarah Palin of Alaska, the
    Republican vice presidential candidate, contending that Russia's
    incursion into Georgia was "unprovoked," while others argue that
    Georgia's shelling of Tshkinvali was provocation. Georgia claims that
    its main evidence - two of several calls secretly recorded by its
    intelligence service on Aug. 7 and 8 - shows that Russian tanks and
    fighting vehicles were already passing through the Roki Tunnel linking
    Russia to South Ossetia before dawn on Aug. 7.

    By Russian accounts, the war began at 11:30 that night, when President
    Mikheil Saakashvili of Georgia ordered an attack on Russian positions
    in Tshkinvali. Russian combat units crossed the border into South
    Ossetia only later, Russia has said.

    General Lieutenant Nikolai Uvarov of Russia, a former United Nations
    military attach?, who served as a Defense Ministry spokesman during
    the war, insisted that Georgia's attack surprised Russia and that its
    leaders scrambled to respond while Russian peacekeeping forces were
    under fire. He said President Dmitri Medvedev had been on a cruise on
    the Volga River. Putin was at the Olympics in Beijing.

    "The minister of defense, by the way, was on vacation in the Black Sea
    somewhere," he said. "We never expected them to launch an attack."

    Matthew Bryza, the deputy assistant secretary of state who coordinates
    diplomacy in the Caucasus, said the contents of the recorded
    conversations were consistent with what Georgians appeared to believe
    on Aug. 7, in the final hours before the war, when a brief cease-fire
    collapsed.

    "During the height of all of these developments, when I was on the
    phone with senior Georgian officials, they sure sounded completely
    convinced that Russian armored vehicles had entered the Roki Tunnel,
    and exited the Roki Tunnel, before and during the cease-fire," he
    said. "I said, under instructions, that we urge you not to engage
    these Russians directly."

    By the night of Aug. 7, he said, he spoke with Eka Tkeshelashvili,
    Georgia's foreign minister, shortly before President Saakashvili
    issued his order to attack, The International Herald Tribune reports.

    Meanwhile, according European media reports, certain intercepts prove
    that some high-ranking American officials were inciting the Georgian
    leadership to aggression against South Ossetia. An investigation
    initiated by the U.S. Congress is underway, the reports say.
    From: Baghdasarian
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