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  • FRIDAY AUGUST 8 2008 12:30 PM

Russian and Georgian Forces Clash in Ossetia

Tags: Russia, war

"Russia is fighting a war with us in our own territory," Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili announced today.

Reuters reported today that the Russian military has entered into territory claimed by the Republic of Georgia - what is currently a breakaway region known as South Ossetia. Russian tanks are currently clashing with Georgian forces in South Ossetia and the Russian airforce is striking targets in Georgia proper.

Russia's decision to use force stemmed most immediately from Georgia's attack on the Ossetian capital of Tskhinvali yesterday. Conflict over spy drones, mutual sniper attacks, and artillery shelling has marred Russian-Georgian relations in the preceding weeks and months.

Russia claims that Georgia is to blame for the fighting:

Saakashvili rejected Russian assertions that the fighting was sparked by events in South Ossetia, where Moscow accuses Georgian forces of aggressive action against Russian peacekeepers and others.


Meanwhile, the Georgian president accuses Russian forces of intentionally targeting civilians and dismisses the Russian claims.

For those not familiar with politics of the south Caucasus, Georgia is an independent nation that borders Russia, Turkey, Azerbaijan, and Armenia. The nation is known for its excellent wines (like kindzmarauli and kvanchkara), spicy cuisine, and being the birthplace of Iosif Dzhugashvili - better known as Stalin. The landscape of Georgia is beautiful and it is home to four UNESCO cultural heritage sites. The population of Georgia is overwhelmingly Eastern Orthodox and has been Christian since Roman times. It is also the home to 12 different living languages (plus Russian and Armenian) and at least 18 distinct ethnic groups.

Russian-Georgian relations date back to the early 1860s, when King Herekle asked for Russian aid (as a fellow Orthodox nation) to secure their independence against both the Ottoman Turks and the Qajar Persians who competed for dominance of the Caucasus. Russia, under Catherine the Great, repeatedly failed to honor military obligations to Herekle but due to court intrigue, the aging monarch feared for the survival of his dynasty. Consequently, he signed the Treaty of Georgievsk in 1873, making Russia the protector of the eastern half of modern Georgia. Under Paul I, Russia formally annexed eastern Georgia in 1801 and conquered the rest within 10 years. The nation remained part of the Russian empire and the Soviet Union (with the exception of a brief independence following the collapse of the Romanov dynasty) until 1991, when Georgia declared its independence.

Things were not rosy* for post-independence Georgia, however, as even the former Soviet dissident and human rights activist Zviad Gamsakhurdia ruled in an authoritarian manner (even accusing his enemies of "sabotage" and treason). After his ouster by a violent coup, the opposition forces appointed Eduard Shevardnadze as president of the nation. His rule was likewise characterized by corruption and nepotism, leading to his peaceful ouster in the Rose Revolution of 2003. Russian Foreign Minister Ivanov negotiated the resignation of Gamsakhurdia in a summit meeting with the Georgian president and the opposition (including pro-Western and American-educated current president Mikheil Saakashvili).

While political representation has taken a turn for the better in the past five years in Georgia, the country is plagued with problems. Almost half of the population lives beneath the poverty line. Corruption and crime are rampant. More importantly - two regions of Georgia broke away after the 1991 independence: South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Following Saakashvili's campaign promises to clamp down on separatism, the leader of the autonomous region of Adjara also threatened to secede, leading to another crisis. While Georgia resolved the Adjara crisis peacefully, it was defeated militarily in its campaigns in both South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Georgia cannot exert military control over either region, largely due to Russian support of the separatists. Both of these conflicts led to slaughter of innocent civilians by all sides and ended in ethnic cleansing of the Georgian population in the breakaway regions.

South Ossetia continues to be a problem for Russian-Georgian relations. The UN, EU, and NATO refuse to recognize South Ossetia as an independent nation, while Russia extends visas to the population. Georgia hopes to suppress the Ossetian de facto independence and Saakashvili is under pressure from the public to do so. Meanwhile, Russia backs South Ossetia as a means of exerting power over Georgia and countering American influence in the region.

America, in fact, is deeply involved in the Russian-Georgian conflict at least in the eyes of the two players. Following George W. Bush's visit to Tbilisi in 2005, the Georgians renamed the street by their airport to "George W. Bush avenue." As a Reuters article notes, the United States has 120 soldiers in Georgia. President Saakashvili asserts that the influence of the US is even deeper, though. According to him, the latest Russian-Georgian conflict:

... is not about Georgia anymore. It's about America, its values.


He continued to say:

They made no secret. The are unhappy with our closeness with the United States, with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, with the West in general.


Meanwhile, the NY Times reports that:

Georgia is also valuable to Washington because it is an ally in the Iraq war. With 2,000 troops in Iraq, it is the third-largest contributor of troops there, after the United States and Britain.


The United States will have difficulty remaining uninvolved, especially given Georgia's immediate decision to pull these troops out of Iraq.

US Presidential candidate John McCain has called on Russia to withdraw from Georgia and asks for an emergency UN Security Council meeting (Note: one already took place 12 hours before he called for it). Some bloggers are already claiming that this event will increase McCain's rating in polls because of his hawkish stance.

*Yeah, that's a pun on Georgia's Rose Revolution...

 

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Comments
Adroitbeing

Adroitbeing

I'm lost
September 2003

AUG 20, 2008 08:35 AM

SockPuppet said:
Indeed. Which is a very good reason to reduce dependence on crude oil, ASAP. (Not just imported crude oil. All crude oil. And when I say "reduce", I mean "by 50% or more".)



Difficult to disagree, as so much of the pressure the US is now applying to Russia appears to be driven by that country's decision to nationalize its energy economy and in doing so, keeping US and UK oil companies from playing on that field.

SockPuppet

SockPuppet

I'm lost
July 2006

AUG 20, 2008 04:18 PM

Adroitbeing said:

SockPuppet said:
Indeed. Which is a very good reason to reduce dependence on crude oil, ASAP. (Not just imported crude oil. All crude oil. And when I say "reduce", I mean "by 50% or more".)



Difficult to disagree, as so much of the pressure the US is now applying to Russia appears to be driven by that country's decision to nationalize its energy economy and in doing so, keeping US and UK oil companies from playing on that field.



Quite. By contrast, the USA is not in a position to do anything of the sort.

motorfirebox

motorfirebox

Pittsburgh, PA
March 2004

AUG 28, 2008 01:59 PM

hahah, this is awesome. "no fair, you guys tricked us into invading and almost taking over a country that we've been wanting to invade and take over for years!"

also, i think Putin's record is scratched:

"U.S. citizens were indeed in the area in conflict," Putin said. "They were acting in implementing those orders doing as they were ordered, and the only one who can give such orders is their leader."


orders ordered the orderlies to order!

SockPuppet

SockPuppet

I'm lost
July 2006

AUG 28, 2008 03:53 PM

Sanctions possible.

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner suggested some EU countries were considering sanctions against Russia.
Mr Kouchner insisted France had made no proposals for sanctions itself but, as current president of the EU, would aim to get consensus among all 27 countries of the bloc if sanctions were envisaged.
France has called an emergency EU summit on Monday to reassess relations with Russia.



The US has said it is now considering scrapping a US-Russia civilian nuclear co-operation pact in response to the conflict.



Late on Thursday, the UN held an open meeting to discuss the situation in Georgia but it descended into an angry exchange.
Russian ambassador to the UN, Vitaly Churkin ... questioned their criticism of the use of force, asking the US representative: "Did you find any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq?"



Earlier on Thursday, Russia failed to get strong backing from its Asian allies over the Georgia conflict.
...
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev insisted he had the backing of the nations over Moscow's actions.

Volkov

Volkov

San Antonio, TX
OLD SKOOL

AUG 28, 2008 04:01 PM

sounds like Putin is throwing a fit after he couldn't get the Shanghai Cooperation Organization to back Russia on their moves in Ossetia.

looks like everyone is going to end up with egg on thier face after this one. Saakashvili is going to look like an idiot for forcing the issue and then losing, not only Ossetia and Abkhazia, but the bulk of Georgia's military forces as well since Russia dismantled pretty much all of their bases and hardware during their (ongoing) occupation.

Russia is caught looking like the school yard bully beating the snot out of the kid three grades younger, looking up with bloodied fists saying "what?" while simotaneously stomping on the kid.

Russia continues to keep troops positioned around Poti and is implicated in several bombings of trains carrying oil through Georgia to be sold to the West. Then Putin throws a fit when China, Tajikistan, Kyrgystan, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan don't back them up. These are countries whose oil and natural gas was traveling through Georgia when the rail lines were disrupted, first by the conflict and then by the bombings.

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