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Tensions mount between Georgia and Russia
By Niall Green
18 August 2007
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Deteriorating relations between Georgia and Russia were exacerbated
last week when Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili accused
the Russian airforce of the bombardment of Georgian
territory. The Georgian government accused Moscow of firing a
Raduga Kh-58 guided missile at the village of Tsitelubani in the
Gori region, about 35 miles northwest from the capital Tbilisi.
Georgian Foreign Minister Gela Bezhuashvili announced to the
media, We confirm the fact of a bombing on Georgias
sovereign territor.... We have incontrovertable evidence that
the bombing occurred.
Bezhuashvili told reporters that both radar and eyewitness
evidence indicated that two planes violated Georgian airspace
on the evening of August 6, local time. Allegedly a Russian Sukhoi-24
fighter-bomber aircraft fired the missile, with a 140-kg warhead
that failed to explode.
Local resident Ilia Psuturi told Reuters news agency: I
was sitting in my garden...when I saw a plane in the sky. I then
saw smoke rising from the ground up to the sky and only then did
I hear the explosion. The plane then turned around.
In Tbilisi, the Georgian foreign ministry summoned the Russian
ambasador and presented him with a formal complaint. On August
8, President Saakashvili travelled to Tsitelbani to tell the press,
All this provocation is aimed at stiring up panic to weaken
the stability of Georgia and to change the countrys policies.
Interior Ministry spokesman Shota Ustiashvili told the BBC
the planes had flown some 70 kilometres (43 miles) over Georgia.
Ustiashvili said the jets flew from a Russian base in the North
Caucasus before firing the missile, which landed in a corn and
potato field just metres from a house.
It has become common practice for the Russian air force
and for the government troops to sneak into the Georgian territory,
Ustiashvili said. But what is different in this incident...is
that they have threatened Georgian airspace much deeper, and that
they have used a very powerful bomb, he continued.
Moscow denies all involvement. Russias air force
neither on Monday nor Tuesday flew flights over Georgia,
said Colonel Alexander Drobyshevsky, aide to the chief of the
Russian air force.
Tsitelubani is close to the border of the breakaway Georgian
province of South Ossetia, which relies on political and military
support from Moscow.
The government of the province, which has been separated from
Georgia since a civil war in 1994, is not internationally recognised.
The leader of South Ossetias de facto government, Eduard
Kokoiti, said Georgian planes fired the missile in an elaborate
attempt to discredit Russia. This is a well-planned provocation,
claimed Kokoiti. A Georgian military plane crossed into
South Ossetia on Monday, performed manoeuvres above Ossetian villages
and dropped two bombs, he told Russias Interfax news
agency.
Alexander Rondeli, president of the Georgian Foundation for
Strategic and International Studies, said: As always the
Russians pretend the bomb appeared from New Zealand or Mars but
we know our great neighbour enjoys sending us these little gifts.
This was a message from Russia to the west that this is our sphere
of influence and you have to know your place.
Georgian authorities had suggested that the alleged missile,
which is designed to hit radar systems, was intended to target
an area where Georgia keeps part of its radar network. However,
the Georgian media has subsequently reported a story that the
two Russian air force planes had been flying over the southern
part of South Ossetia, allegedly a common occurrence approved
of by the provincial administration, when they were attacked from
the ground by South Ossetian militias linked to Moscow. In an
attempt to out-maneuver what was probably a shoulder-fired rocket,
one of the jets dumped its Raduga Kh-58 missile.
The commander of Russias garrison in South Ossetia, General
Marat Kulakhmetov, said that an unknown aircraft dropped the missile
after it had flown over South Ossetia and had come under ground
fire. He claimed that the identity of the aircraft was unknown,
but that it had come from Georgia, not Russia.
Another explanation, stemming from some initial Georgian Interior
Ministry reports, is that the unexploded missile that landed in
the village might have been a surface-to-air rocket that had been
fired at the two alleged Russian planes from either South
Ossetia or Georgia itself.
Deep tensions in the Caucasus
A Russian military provocation should not be ruled out, as
Moscow has turned to increasingly hostile and reckless means of
attempting to assert its status as the dominant power in the area
of the former Soviet Union. The Putin administration has a long
and bloody history of violent provocations in the Caucasus region,
especially in the neighboring Russian republic of Chechnya, where
the Kremlin has waged two brutal wars in the past 15 years to
maintain its control.
But whether it was a genuine Russian attack or a Georgian ploy,
the episode expresses the deep tensions that exist in the Caucasus
region of the former Soviet Union. It has been used by all sides
to ramp up tensions in existing disputes over the sovereignty
of Georgias two unofficially autonomous provinces allied
to Moscow.
Relations between Russia and Georgia were already soured by
a dispute earlier this year when Georgia deported four Russian
army officers on suspicion of spying, and Moscow responded by
throwing out several thousand Georgian workers and banning imports
of fruit and wine that are vital to the Georgian economy.
Last year, the uneasy relationship in Tsitelubani between Ossetian
villagers and Georgian villagers was strained by referenda organised
by the two ethnic groups, one seeking independence from Georgia
and the other federation within it. Following the civil war in
the early 1990s, around 160,000 ethnic Georgians left South Ossetia,
with fewer than half having returned home.
In another incident in March of this year, the Georgian government
accused Russia of using military helicopters to launch an attack
on its territory in the Kodori Gorge, a disputed area of Abkhazia,
the other breakaway area of the country under Russian suzerainty.
About 500 Russian troops are based in South Ossetia. There
have been unconfirmed reports that Moscow has moved military hardware
into the region. Georgia has at times moved its armed forces close
to the breakaway provinces.
The present Georgian government came to power with the backing
of the United States as a result of the so-called Rose Revolution
in 2003. President Mikhail Saakashvili is a close regional ally
of Washington, where his regime is viewed as a barrier to the
expansion of Russian interests in the hydrocarbon-rich Central
Asian region. As a token of this relationship, Georgia currently
has the third largest contingent of troops in Iraq, after the
US and Britain.
After the missile landed, Saakashvili was quick to point out
that the situation was not solely a Georgian problem, but
for European security as a whole, urging help from Europe
and the US for his regimes disputes against Russia. After
the alleged attack, Foreign Minister Bezhuashvili telephoned around
various Western capitals in an attempt to elicit support for a
United Nations Security Council session to discuss the incident.
US Deputy Assistant Seretary of State Matt Bryza condemned
the attack, but Washington and the European Union called on both
sides to remain calm.
There is an ongoing and deepening stand-off between Moscow
and Washington over a host of issues, including the location of
an American missile system in eastern Europe, Western access to
Russian oil and gas, the fate of the Serbian region of Kosovo
and Irans plans for a nuclear reactor.
Georgia has also applied to join NATO and the European Union,
a move that Moscow bitterly opposes as an encroachment into its
near abroad by US and European imperialism.
With such great-power rivalries brewing in the region, further
dangerous episodes are inevitable, with all the attending potential
for igniting further ethnic conflicts in the Caucasus.
See Also:
Russia moves toward
military conflict with Georgia
[30 October 2006]
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