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Armenia: Georgia's Defeat Prevented Wider Caucasus War

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  • Armenia: Georgia's Defeat Prevented Wider Caucasus War

    ARMENIA: GEORGIA'S DEFEAT PREVENTED WIDER CAUCASUS WAR

    Center for Research on Globalization
    http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va &aid=14684
    Aug 7 2009

    Armenia would be in a state of war should Georgia's plan not have
    failed in 2008

    -Azerbaijan was preparing a war against Armenia along with Georgia,
    yet Russia's actions frustrated its plans. "Armenia would be in a
    state of war should Georgia's plan not have failed in 2008."

    Last year's August events in Georgia showed the true position of
    interested parties, politologist Sergey Shakaryants told a news
    conference in Yerevan.

    According to him, the Georgian-Russian conflict played a crucial
    role for Armenia. "I thought that the NKR [Nagorn Karabakh Republic]
    conflict settlement will serve a as precedent to other unacknowledged
    states of Transcaucasia, but the opposite happened," the Armenian
    politologist said, stressing that even unacknowledged states like
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia were acknowledged, still the NKR was not.

    According to Sergey Shakaryants, Azerbaijan was preparing a war
    against Armenia along with Georgia, yet Russia's actions frustrated
    its plans. "Armenia would be in a state of war should Georgia's plan
    not have failed in 2008," he said, adding that last year Azerbaijan
    thrice attempted attacks on the NKR, yet the attempts were frustrated
    thanks to NKR forces.

    On August 8, during the night and early morning, Georgia launched
    a military offensive to surround and capture the capital of [the]
    Republic of South Ossetia, Tskhinvali, thus breaking the terms of the
    1992 ceasefire and crossing into the security zone established therein.

    The heavy shelling, which included Georgian rockets being fired into
    South Ossetia, left parts of the capital city in ruins, causing a
    humanitarian crisis.

    Russia sent troops across the Georgian border into South Ossetia. In
    five days of fighting, the Russian forces captured the regional
    capital Tskhinvali, pushed back Georgian troops, and largely destroyed
    Georgia's military infrastructure using airstrikes deep inside the
    smaller country's territory.

    On August 12, Russian President Medvedev said that he had ordered
    an end to military operations in Georgia. Later on the same day,
    Russian President Medvedev approved a six-point peace plan brokered by
    President-in-Office of the European Union, Nicolas Sarkozy, in Moscow;
    both sides were to sign it by the 17th.

    On August 27, President Medvedev of the Russian Federation signed
    two Presidential decrees recognizing the Republic of Abkhazia and
    the Republic of South Ossetia as sovereign independent states to
    authorize the drafting of treaties of friendship, cooperation and
    mutual assistance with the new states.
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