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Georgian-South Ossetian conflict

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  • Re: Georgian-South Ossetian conflict

    Abkhasia starts war with Georgia


    source: http://russiatoday.com/news/news/28706


    Armed forces belonging to Georgia’s breakaway republic of Abkhazia have begun an operation to force Georgian troops out of the upper part of the Kodori gorge. Abkhazia have used artillery and air strikes against Georgian troops in the gorge.

    Thousands of Russians are on holiday in the picturesque republic with the long coastline. They fear a conflict could result in innocent blood being spilled.

    But RT correspondent Aleksandr Luchaninov says Russians are not ready to leave the area just yet.

    "Those I spoke to said they are very concerned, and in case of trouble they are prepared to leave the region immediately," he said.

    For several days Georgian troops have been amassing on the border.

    Abkhasia's president, Sergey Bagapsh, said the breakaway republic’s troops are in contact with the peacekeeping forces in the region.

    The atmosphere in the capital Sukhumi is tense, and officials are anticipating Georgian aggression.

    "Today it's South Ossetia, tomorrow it might be Abkhasia," said Bagapsh, explaining his decision to move the troops.

    Comment


    • Re: Georgian-South Ossetian conflict

      Originally posted by Hye_Psycho
      the media here are utterly repulsive. "invasion", "russian aggression"..
      truelly one of the funniest/ironic statements ive ever seen comes Saakashvili as he pleads for help
      " its not about Georgia..its about the basic values the west has..the basic values the US has always preached us"

      anyway most reports are now proclaiming the Russians have total control of S.O

      and spot on HayotzAmrotz.. if it was any other 'non-demecratic' leader, they would it be at the ICJ or ICC facing charges against humanity. lets hope the Russians dish own their own brand of justice
      Here's another US media beauty:

      Georgia: Russia enters into 'war' in South Ossetia

      Over 1,300 people are reported dead after Russian forces responded to a Georgian attack on rebels in the breakaway province of South Ossetia by mounting a full scale invasion.
      There making it sound as if the Russians killed the 1300 souls when in fact, it was the Christian-Turk Georgians are responsible.

      Who controls the media again?
      Last edited by crusader1492; 08-09-2008, 06:08 AM.

      Comment


      • Re: Georgian-South Ossetian conflict

        Originally posted by crusader1492 View Post
        Who controls the media again?
        But why would Joos be pro-Georgian?

        Comment


        • Re: Georgian-South Ossetian conflict

          Originally posted by yerazhishda View Post
          But why would Joos be pro-Georgian?
          Oil, money, power, greed and big hooked noses

          Comment


          • Re: Georgian-South Ossetian conflict

            Originally posted by crusader1492 View Post
            Oil, money, power, greed and big hooked noses
            I shoulda figured!

            Comment


            • Re: Georgian-South Ossetian conflict

              http://www.debka.com/article.php?aid=1358

              Originally posted by yerazhishda View Post
              But why would Joos be pro-Georgian?

              Comment


              • Re: Georgian-South Ossetian conflict

                I hope many here that are following the news from Caucasus will realize what is Western “democratic” media is about.

                Originally posted by crusader1492 View Post
                Here's another US media beauty:

                There making it sound as if the Russians killed the 1300 souls when in fact, it was the Christian-Turk Georgians are responsible.

                Who controls the media again?

                Comment


                • Re: Georgian-South Ossetian conflict

                  Originally posted by skhara View Post
                  I read in a reuters article where a US military official speaking on condition of anonymity said that they were surprised by the speed and the intensity of the Russian intervention.

                  If that is true, then this was certainly orchestrated in Washington. As Armenian said in another thread, the Kremlin better get this one right.

                  A ceasefire, in my opinion, cannot be given to Georgia at the moment. A condition for ceasefire has to be humiliating for Georgia and her "friends". At the very least, Georgia cannot get away with just decimating Tskhinvalli, and calling it a day. Their airfields and sea-ports have to be destroyed.

                  It would be absolutely fantastic if they capture Sakashvilli and set up a kangaroo court in Moscow calling it the "International Criminal Court for the former Georgia."
                  The Russians could ask for an "unconditional surrender". For those of you unfamiliar with the term it means that Georgian immediately cease military operations and Russia dictates the terms of truce and treaty.

                  Comment


                  • Re: Georgian-South Ossetian conflict

                    Originally posted by yerazhishda View Post
                    The question is: why hasn't Georgia surrendered already? Saakashvili knows he can't possibly hold off the Russians for much longer. I think he's trying to get other countries to sympathize with his (self-created) "situation". He's waiting for the Western calvary to arrive and protect "freedom and democracy".
                    He's always been hot-headed and stubborn. He has painted himself into a corner and there is no way out.

                    Comment


                    • Re: Georgian-South Ossetian conflict

                      Abkhazia forces Georgia to retreat from Kodori Gorge as Russia marches on to Tblisi...


                      source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7551595.stm


                      Peace bid as Ossetia crisis rages

                      A delegation including envoys from the US, EU and Nato is heading to Georgia as its conflict with Russia over the breakaway South Ossetia region deepens.

                      The envoys hope to broker a truce after three days of fighting which are said to have killed or injured hundreds.

                      UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband said the fighting risked incurring "civilian losses on a large scale".

                      Hundreds have fled the fighting in both South Ossetia and Georgia, where some towns have been bombed by Russian jets.

                      A Russian air strike on Gori, a Georgian town near South Ossetia, left 60 people dead, many of them civilians, Georgia says.

                      Russian officials say hundreds of civilians have been killed in South Ossetia. Georgia denies the figure, which cannot be independently verified.

                      Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has said his country is seeking "to force the Georgian side to peace".

                      Meanwhile, separatists in Abkhazia - Georgia's other breakaway region - say they have launched air and artillery strikes on Georgian forces in the Kodori Gorge.

                      'Broadening' conflict

                      The joint delegation of the US, EU, Nato and the Organisation of Security and Co-operation in Europe is due to visit Georgia on Saturday evening.

                      "Reports of fighting and bombing outside South Ossetia are especially disturbing as they represent a broadening and deepening of the conflict," Mr Miliband said, confirming that the UK would be sending Sir Brian Fall, his ministry's Representative for the South Caucasus.
                      "The UK will be discussing with all our partners how to stop the spread of violence, secure a ceasefire and get talks under way," he added.

                      Russian PM Vladimir Putin has stopped in Russia's North Ossetia region on his return from the Olympics.

                      He arrived in the North Ossetian capital, Vladikavkaz, to discuss the influx of refugees from the conflict in South Ossetia.

                      Russia's ambassador to Nato, Dmitry Rogozin, said there could be no "consultations" with Georgia until Georgian forces returned to their positions and re-established "the status quo".

                      Accounts differ over who controls South Ossetia's capital, with Moscow saying it has "liberated" Tskhinvali.

                      The crisis began spiralling when Georgian forces launched a surprise attack on Thursday night to regain control of South Ossetia, which has had de facto independence since the end of a civil war in 1992.

                      The move followed days of exchanges of heavy fire with the Russian-backed separatists.

                      In response to the Georgian crackdown, Moscow sent armoured units across the border into South Ossetia.

                      'Total... aggression'

                      The Georgian parliament has approved a presidential decree declaring a state of war for 15 days.

                      Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili has denounced Russian reports of a high civilian death toll from his forces as an "egregious lie".

                      Mr Saakashvili said he had decided to declare that Georgia was in a state of war because it was "under a state of total [Russian] military aggression".

                      Georgia is withdrawing its entire contingent of 2,000 troops from Iraq to help deal with the crisis.

                      US President George W Bush said the Russian attacks outside South Ossetia marked a "dangerous escalation in the crisis" and said Georgia's territorial integrity had to be respected.

                      "The attacks are occurring in regions of Georgia far from the zone of conflict in South Ossetia," he said while attending the Olympics.

                      "The violence is endangering regional peace."

                      Tskhinvali 'destroyed'

                      Fighting continued around Tskhinvali overnight and into Saturday morning, although not at the same intensity as on Friday, Russian media reported.

                      Later, the Russian Army's Ground Forces commander, Gen Vladimir Boldyrev, said his troops had "fully liberated" the city and were pushing Georgian forces back.

                      But the secretary of the Georgian National Security Council, Khakha Lomaia, insisted that the city remained "under the complete control of our troops".

                      Russian commanders, who said reinforcements were being sent to the region, confirmed that two Russian jets had been shot down over Georgia.

                      Speaking to Russian news agency Interfax, Russia's ambassador to Georgia, Vyacheslav Kovalenko, said on Saturday that 2,000 civilians and 13 Russian peacekeepers had been killed in Tskhinvali.

                      "The city of Tskhinvali no longer exists," he said. "It is gone. The Georgian military has destroyed it."

                      The International Red Cross (ICRC) said it had received reports that hospitals in the city were "overflowing" with casualties.

                      In Gori, Russian aircraft bombed mostly military targets, where Georgian troops had been massing to support their forces engaged in South Ossetia.

                      The BBC's Richard Galpin in Gori heard loud explosions and saw large plumes of smoke rising into the sky; soldiers and civilians were seen running through the streets.

                      Injured civilians were being pulled from the buildings, which were on fire.

                      The Georgian foreign ministry said the Black Sea port of Poti, the site of a major oil shipment facility, had been "devastated" by a Russian air raid.

                      Meanwhile Georgian TV reported that the Georgian-controlled section of the Kodori Gorge in Abkhazia was under fire, blaming the bombardment on Russian forces.

                      The foreign minister in Abkhazia's self-declared government, Sergei Shamba, said Abkhaz forces had launched an attack aimed at driving Georgian forces out of the gorge.

                      It was not clear whether planes used in the attack on the gorge belonged to Russia or to the Abkhaz separatists.

                      Russia has a peacekeeping force in Abkhazia under an agreement made following civil wars in the 1990s, when the region declared independence and formed links with Moscow.

                      The BBC's James Rodgers in Moscow says diplomatic initiatives to end the fighting have so far proved fruitless.

                      On Friday evening, the UN Security Council failed to agree on the wording of a statement calling for a ceasefire.

                      The UK, the US and France, are pinpointing what they say is Russia's aggression as the key factor in the slide towards war, while Moscow insists Georgia is to blame.

                      **********************
                      ARMED FORCES COMPARED

                      GEORGIA
                      Total personnel: 26,900
                      Main battle tanks (T-72): 82
                      Armoured personnel carriers: 139
                      Combat aircraft (Su-25): Seven
                      Heavy artillery pieces (including Grad rocket launchers): 95

                      RUSSIA
                      Total personnel: 641,000
                      Main battle tanks (various): 6,717
                      Armoured personnel carriers: 6,388
                      Combat aircraft (various): 1,206
                      Heavy artillery pieces (various): 7,550
                      Source: Jane's Sentinel Country Risk Assessments

                      ****************************

                      "Our peacekeepers and the units attached to them are currently carrying out an operation to force the Georgian side to [agree to] peace."

                      Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
                      Last edited by yerazhishda; 08-09-2008, 08:22 AM.

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