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NATO Taught Georgia A Lesson

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  • NATO Taught Georgia A Lesson

    NATO TAUGHT GEORGIA A LESSON
    Georgy Dvali

    WPS Agency, Russia
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    June 3, 2009 Wednesday

    NATO'S MILITARY EXERCISE ENDED IN GEORGIA; Military exercise of the
    Alliance in Georgia is finally over.

    International military exercise within the framework of the Partnership
    for Peace NATO's Program in Georgia officially ended, yesterday. The
    war game in Georgia lasted almost a whole month despite bitter
    protests from Moscow. Russia is convinced that the West abets the
    Georgian leadership and President Mikhail Saakashvili responsible
    for the shooting war in South Ossetia last August.

    The exercise in Vaziani not far from Tbilisi began on May 6 and
    included two phases. Cooperative Longbow (May 6-19) was focused on
    compatibility of international brigades deployed in crises. Cooperative
    Lancer that followed concentrated on deployment of battalions in the
    field. Over 1,000 servicemen from regular armies of 14 NATO members
    and partners participated in the exercise.

    Official Tbilisi regarded the exercise as a political gesture rather
    than a military event. Russia was categorically against organization
    of a military exercise in Georgia. It was convinced then and remains
    convinced now that the Alliance encourages Saakashvili and Co to
    launch new escapades. (One such escapade resulted in a shooting war
    in South Ossetia last year.) NATO leadership feigned innocence and
    insisted that the exercise had been planned long ago and had nothing
    to do with Russia or runaway provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

    In any event, the event was noticeably less grandiose than Brussels
    had hoped to make it - partially due to the pressure applied by Moscow,
    partially to financial problems. Armenia, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Moldova,
    Serbia, and Estonia begged off at the last possible moment. Armored
    battalion of the Georgian regular army quartered in Mukhrovani mutinied
    literally a day before the planned beginning of the exercise. Official
    Tbilisi announced right then and there that the putschists were out
    to wreck the NATO exercise.

    By and large, the exercise was a success - discounting the incident
    with a Canadian wounded when a hand grenade exploded before he
    tossed it.

    Defense Minister David Sikharulidze called the exercise "a
    necessary element of Georgia's prime objective - Euroatlantic
    integration." Saakashvili himself visited Vaziani to thank NATO
    officers for "support" of Georgia's efforts to evolve to standards
    of the Alliance.

    "That was a routine exercise, nothing more. The involved servicemen
    drilled peacekeeping operations. The legend stipulated a situation
    resembling the Iraqi one," Arsenali Chief Editor Irakly Aladashvili
    said. "It is the political aspect of the exercise that really counts. I
    mean, NATO supported Georgia despite Moscow's protests."
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