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War, War, War See other War, War, War Articles Title: Loathing mounts as Russia reveals iron fist Published: August 10 2008 18:26 | Last updated: August 10 2008 18:26 The people of Tirdzsuzi, a settlement on a picturesque rural road, remember how things used to be with their neighbours in the town of Tskhinvali, 20km away. Despite the fact that Tirdzsuzi is made up of ethnic Georgians, while Tskhinvali is composed largely of ethnic Ossetians, this never used to bother anyone, says Mabuku Sakulachvili, an elderly farmer. We used to trade with them, we used to marry each other. There were never any problems. As he speaks an explosion a few kilometres away is a reminder that the town is just 6km from the front line. Russian troops were advancing through the South Ossetian breakaway region towards the settlement on Sunday, after capturing Tskhinvali from Georgian troops after days of fighting. Its those tanks, says Mr Sakulachvili, waving his hand to indicate five Georgian T-72 tanks hidden badly in foliage. The Russian jets must have found them. All along this road the occasional antennae sticking out of a tree is the only sign of the Georgian army deployed along the likely route of a Russian advance. With camouflage as their only defence, they are constant prey for Russian fighter aircraft darting through the skies, bombing almost with impunity. Georgias air force lies in ruins, largely destroyed on runways within the first hours of the war. Mr Sakulachvilis son, Irakli, is in one of the units camped out on the road, a gangly youth wearing US-issue desert camouflage that he got during a seven-month stint with coalition troops in Iraq. He announces he cannot talk to reporters, and his comrades do the same. The tiny Georgian army that all weekend has faced a far superior force of Russians has surprised its foes with its tenacity and skill. But its tiny core of a thousand or so fierce and professional fighters, trained by US and Israeli advisers, has been all but overwhelmed by the air power the Russians have brought to bear. There is little to back up this professional force, which withdrew from their positions on Sunday in what was described by the government as a tactical relocation. The bulk of the forces on Sunday that lay along the road from Tskhinvali were conscripts and national guardsmen with a week of military training. Some were without uniforms and there was a desperate lack of vehicles: city buses and civilian cars were pressed into service. In the regional centre of Gori, south of Tirdzsuzi and 30km from Tskhinvali, the situation is dire. Most residents left the city after Russian jets bombed the town on Saturday morning, hitting an army base but also three apartment buildings nearby. The bombs blasted through the buildings, hurling flaming bodies into the streets, residents say. Two hospitals in the town are full of injured from the front, and sobbing mothers and wives wait for news of their loved ones. Reservists who a few days ago were bank tellers or janitors mill around gloomily, waiting for orders. A unit of Georgian commandos, wearing bandanas and driving sleek four-wheel drives, show footage captured on a mobile phone of the wreckage of a Russian Tu-22 fighter bomber. The pilot of the aircraft, who survived, was shown on television soon afterwards. Georgians are still in a state of shock and unsure why the conflict started. Most refuse to blame their president, Mikheil Saakashvili, for launching an offensive against the South Ossetian enclave on Thursday night, seemingly miscalculating that the Russian army would not intervene or, if it did, that international pressure would force a quick ceasefire. He didnt have a choice. He had to act as he did, says Nina Rusadze, a press officer for the Georgian military. Most back the Georgian government, saying their living standards have improved under Mr Saakashvili and that he deserves some credit for making Georgia a normal country. The issue of Ossetian sovereignty is far from the thoughts of most Georgians, who do not seem to share the governments preoccupation with it. Mr Sakulachvili scratches his head and remembers fondly friendships with his Ossetian neighbours in Tskhinvali, but says things started to change after the fall of the Soviet Union and the brief civil war that the enclave fought to gain de facto independence from Georgia in 1991-92. But even after that there was no hostility with his friends in Tskhinvali, he says. The Ossetians have nothing to do with this, he believes. Its just the Russians. COUNTDOWN TO CONFLICT July 4 2008 South Ossetia orders general mobilisation of forces against Georgia after two people killed in shelling. Moscow accuses Tbilisi of act of aggression. July 9 Russia admits its aircraft have flown over South Ossetia to avoid bloodshed. August 1 Six killed in shoot-out in South Ossetia, which says Georgian forces were first to shoot. Georgia blames separatists. August 3 Hundreds flee South Ossetia as battles continue between the separatists and Georgia. Russia warns that South Ossetia is close to large-scale conflict. August 6 Moscow accuses Georgia of sending warplanes into South Ossetia, a charge Tbilisi denies. Russia and the US urge a halt to the violence. August 7 Just hours after Mikhail Saakashvili, Georgias president, says he is offering a ceasefire August 8 Tbilisi warns that Russia and Georgia are on the brink of war after Russian tanks and troops enter South Ossetia. Fierce fighting for control of the regional capital breaks out. Georgia claims Russia has bombed targets outside the South Ossetian conflict zone, including the Georgian port of Poti. August 9 Tbilisi calls for a ceasefire after Moscow ramps up a military offensive. Russian officials say at least 2,000 civilians have died in the regional capital alone.
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 21.
#1. To: Rotara (#0)
Painting Russia as a "hero" or "nice guy" in this Georgia thing is without merit. Russia never does anything not in their self interest.
Russia never does anything not in their self interest. There are no 'good guys' in all this. None. Russia stirred the pot inside Georgia's (breakaway provinces) territory just as much as Georgia did. Georgia is now going to be history. Unless the AmeriKan/NAU/EU/NATO/Israelis come to the rescue. And I can't see how that happens without Turkey's involvement. Of course Russia and China have treaties together in place too.
Not wanting to assume the worst, I see Russia confining its hegemony to Ossetia, based on what I'm seeing.
They're bombing deep into Georgia. They're destroying the country. Their infrastructure, including oil pipelines, etc. Russia is going to take control of a whole bunch they didn't have control over before this current clash.
We'll see how severe this damage is, how much exaggerating is going on, and what happens next. Georgia and its new "friends" in NATO may have to concede that Ossetia is not theirs for the having anymore. This is very plain to me. It's a case of wishful thinking on the EU side if they think they can use force to resolve this. Maybe Russia wants something, and will ask in the UN forum. My sense is that this is ethnic. People who don't care about ethnic things might not understand that, which excludes Bush. He's mighty confused right now, I'd bet.
It's not about people. It's about NATO and the pipeline that cuts out Russia.
#22. To: Rotara (#21)
How do you suggest that this benefits the Russians, then? The pipeline doesn't go through Ossetia, so you're going to claim they'll retake all of Georgia to include the portions through which this pipeline must run? (I don't know its path geographically.)
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