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Title: Russian military moves towards Tbilisi in defiance of Nicolas Sarkozy's peace deal
Source: Telegraph
URL Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor ... colas-Sarkozys-peace-deal.html
Published: Aug 13, 2008
Author: see article
Post Date: 2008-08-13 11:47:04 by Rotara
Keywords: None
Views: 614
Comments: 16

Russian military convoys have left Gori and are on the road to Tbilisi in defiance of the terms of an overnight peace deal brokered by French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

 

Foreign Secretary warns Russia over South Ossetia attack.

A column of 70 Russian military vehicles, including military trucks with anti-aircraft guns and artillery as well as armoured personnel carriers, sped down the road to Tbilisi fluttering Russian flags.

Earlier, as the EU announced plans to send peacekeeping troops to monitor the ceasefire, Russian troops patrolled Gori, destroying an empty Georgian military base in the frontline Georgian town and setting up a checkpoint on the road to Tbilisi.

Civilians in Gori today claimed they had been shot at by Russian soldiers and South Ossetian snipers, who local residents said have been attacking villages outside the town. Georgian troops pulled back from the town of Gori earlier this week.

Georgia has also lost its last stronghold in another separatist province, Abkhazia, overnight as its troops withdrew from the Kodori Gorge.

Russian-backed separatist forces took advantage of the Georgian military's collapse to attack Kodori.

More than 100 Russian military vehicles entered the gorge on Tuesday forcing the Georgian retreat.

Diplomatic efforts to resolve the six-day crisis remain mired in confusing claim and counter-claim.

Russia continued to press its advantage by demanding a review of the future status of separatist regions in Georgia, even though the issue was cut from a French plan for ending the Russian-Georgian conflict.

"It is not possible to resolve these issues outside the context of the status" of the Georgian provinces of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

France, which is currently European Union president, called for peacekeeping monitors ahead of an emergency meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels this morning.

Bernard Kouchner, the French foreign minister, emphasised that the EU should have a presence "on the ground" in the Georgian breakaway region of South Ossetia.

"The idea of having monitors - what you call peacekeeping troops, I wouldn't call them like that - but European controllers, monitors, facilitators, yes, yes and yes." "Controllers, monitors, European facilitators, I think the Russians would accept that," he added.

He gave no specifics about how large the force would be or which nations would contribute, but Bulgaria has already indicated it would allow its Black Sea port of Burgas to be used a logistics base.

Mr Kouchner's statement appeared to contradict comments made earlier in the day by British Foreign Minister David Miliband, who suggested that an EU peacekeeping force was not required.

He called for a "proper international presence" in the region, but added: "I think at the moment people are talking more about the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)".

The 56 nation OSCE, which counts both Georgia and Russia as members, has been used in the past as a forum for defusing Cold War tensions.

But EU president France, riding high after the success of president Nicolas Sarkozy in brokering a ceasefire following meetings in both Moscow and Tbilisi, appears keen to secure that triumph with an EU force.

Alexander Stubb, foreign minister from current OSCE president Finland, said the EU would play a central role "either on the side of the civilian crisis management or the side of military crisis management and peacekeeping".

"We have a ceasefire, we do not yet have peace," he noted, adding that limited hostilities were likely to continue.

"What is probably going to happen is a few skirmishes and a few bombs here and there," he said.

Though the EU peacekeeping plan is still at the planning stage, bickering has already broken out among the 27 EU members over how what action, if any, to take against Russia and how strongly to condemn Moscow's actions.

New EU members states from central and eastern Europe, which once felt Moscow's dominance behind the Iron Curtain, have been vocal in their support for Georgia in the face of Russia "aggression".

Yesterday, a delegation of leaders from Poland, Ukraine and three Baltic states arrived in Tbilisi as a gesture of solidarity.

In Brussels, Lithuanian Foreign Minister Petras Vaitiekunas said Russia's military response during fighting in the last week had been "unacceptable and unproportional".

"Of course there must be some consequences of aggression," he said.

But older EU nations, particularly Germany, are keen not to demonise Russia and risk vital ties, notably over energy supplies of oil and gas.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is due to hold talks with Russian president Dmitry Medvedev on Friday in Russia's Black Sea port of Sochi, just a few miles north of its border with Georgia.

Berlin, which built up close ties with Moscow under the leadership of former Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, has so far been more moderate in criticism of Russia than other EU states, calling for a ceasefire this week because the conflict had revealed the "clear military superiority of Russian forces".

At the foreign ministers' meeting in Brussels however, David Miliband said that following the war in Georgia, the EU must now decide whether to scrap talks over closening co-operation between the bloc and Moscow.

He said EU ministers would meet next month in France to discuss "whether or not and how to proceed with the partnership and cooperation agreement".

A deal to renew the agreement, initially signed in the 1990s, has been stalled for years.


Poster Comment:

A column of 70 Russian military vehicles, including military trucks with anti-aircraft guns and artillery as well as armoured personnel carriers, sped down the road to Tbilisi fluttering Russian flags.

Escalation

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 6.

#6. To: All (#0)

Mikhail Saakashvili

Bodyguards escort Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili, to shelter under a
threat of Russian air attack in Gori, GeorgiaGeorgian president forced to take
cover in Gori

Rotara  posted on  2008-08-13   12:11:27 ET  (1 image) Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 6.

#7. To: All (#6)

South Ossetian separatists backed by Russian forces were accused today of deliberately targeting civilians around the abandoned Georgian city of Gori in blatant defiance of a French-brokered ceasefire.

But Georgian officials said that there was no need to panic over a long armed Russian column that rolled out of the city today and headed south towards the capital, Tbilisi.

The convoy of around 100 vehicles, including armoured personnel carriers, turned off the road after 20 km and was thought to be looping back to the disputed enclave.

The ceasefire was agreed yesterday and endorsed both by President Medvedev of Russia and President Saakashvili of Georgia during a visit by Nicolas Sarkozy, the current European Union chairman. It provides for both sides to return to their positions from before the conflict erupted late last week.

But although there were no reports of any engagements between Georgian and Russian forces, Russia was accused of sending tanks and armoured vehicles into Gori today and of sending its soldiers into villages in the surrounding hills from which smoke could be seen rising

Tony Halpin, a Times correspondent, was blocked from entering Gori at a checkpoint manned by Russian soldiers from Chechnya about a kilometre from the town. He then witnessed a "huge" Russian column as it rolled past, including armoured personnel carriers, troop-carrying trucks and support trucks with anti-aircraft guns.

Some of the soldiers aboard the convoy waved Russian flags and shouted out that they were headed for Tbilisi. "The ceasefire agreement specified that they were meant to go backwards. They are clearly going forwards," he said.

But Ekaterine Zguladze, Georgia's deputy interior minister, told a news conference in Tbilisi: "I’d like to calm everybody down. The Russian military is not advancing towards the capital."

Halpin said that the column turned off the Tbilisi road after about 20km and headed east to the village of Orjosani, where the Russians appeared to be preparing some kind of supply base. Many of those with the column were Ossetian irregulars identified by a piece of white cloth tied around their right arms.

Some of those on the convoy said that they had been ordered to set up base there, but a Georgian official later said that the convoy had continued on, looping round back to South Ossetia.

Halpin said that Georgian forces had set up defensive positions about 10km further down the road towards Tbilisi, about 40km from the capital.

The AFP reported that hundreds of South Ossetian rebels with some Russian army personnel went house-to-house in villages near Gori, setting houses ablaze and looting buildings.

The body of a man, his mouth caked with blood, lay in a street in the village of Dzardzanis and nearby the body of a bearded man could be seen crushed under an overturned mini-van, an AFP journalist reported.

The Human Rights Watch group said its researchers in South Ossetia had "witnessed terrifying scenes of destruction in four villages that used to be populated exclusively by ethnic Georgians".

Earlier, Kremlin officials and army chiefs had denied Georgian claims that 50 Russian tanks were in Gori, which the Georgian army abandoned two days ago.

Instead, Russia continued to vent its anger on what it called Georgian aggression and atrocities and said that its troops would only return to their positions from before the conflict once Georgian soldiers had returned to their barracks.

Sergei Lavrov, the Foreign Minister, also ruled out the continuing participation of Georgian troops in the international peace-keeping force which has been stationed in the disputed territory for over a decade. The Georgians were "traitors" who had turned round and fired on their Russian colleagues, he said.

Russia said that it had suffered 74 dead, 171 wounded and 19 missing from its armed forces in the brief conflict. It continued to accuse Georgia of "ethnic cleansing" and "genocide" against the Russian majority in South Ossetia.

Russia says that some 2,000 civilians were killed and 100,000 displaced. Condoleezza Rice, the US Secretary of State, urged Mr Lavrov in a telephone call to desist from using the two expressions in relation to Georgia's actions, the Russian minister said. President Medvedev also used the terms yesterday with Mr Sarkozy.

While the war of words raged on between a humiliated Georgia and a re-emboldened Kremlin, the West acknowledged that the five-day war had opened a new chapter in its relations with the former superpower that was once again flexing its muscles.

The United States cancelled joint military exercises and David Miliband, the Foreign Secretary, said that Europe should reassess its ties with Russia after its "aggressive" behaviour in Georgia. The Royal Navy also pulled out of joint exercises that Russia was to host in the eastern post of Vladivostok later this month.

In a sign of heightened regional tensions, Viktor Yushchenko, the Ukranian President, signed a decree tightening restrictions on Russia's Black Sea Fleet, which is based in the Ukrainian port of Sevastopol.

It was also becoming increasingly clear that Georgia's assaults on Russian forces in its separatist province had backfired. Mr Saakashvili's conduct came under fire from Eduard Shevardnadze, the Soviet elder statesman who was Georgia's President for eight years until 2003.

"Georgia should not have intervened in [South Ossetian capital] Tskhinvali in such an ill-prepared manner. This was a grave mistake," Mr Shevardnadze told Bild, the German newspaper. "The situation is extremely tense and very complicated. What happens next is uncertain. I hope that the talks of President Saakashvili with his Western partners will lead to an end to the conflict," he said.

Witness: Russian forces head to Tbilisi - 'Civilians targeted' around Gori, as Russian troops on the move (UK Times Online)

Rotara  posted on  2008-08-13 12:14:56 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 6.

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