Tensions Rise As Russia Says Pullout Completed, But Troops Remain

August 22nd, 2008 Posted By Pat Dollard.

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The last Russian military vehicles leave a checkpoint on the highway to Gori, Georgia, Friday, Aug. 22, 2008

IGOETI, Georgia - Russian military convoys rolled out of three key positions in Georgia and headed toward Moscow-backed separatist regions Friday in a significant withdrawal two weeks after thousands of troops roared into the former Soviet republic.

In Moscow, Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov said the pullback into separatist South Ossetia was finished late Friday—but the United States and France were less than impressed.

“( The Russians) have without a doubt failed to live up to their obligations,” U.S. State Department spokesman Robert Wood said in Washington. “Establishing checkpoints, buffer zones are definitely not part of the agreement.”

“Russia is not in compliance and Russia needs to come into compliance now,” Gordon Johndroe, the White House spokesman, told reporters after President Bush spoke by telephone form his ranch in Crawford, Tex., with the French President, Nicolas Sarkozy, who helped negotiate the agreement.

Russia may still use its hold on the main transport and trading routes to keep a headlock on the whole country, possibly applying economic and military pressure toward its strategic aims in the region and an ultimate goal of unseating Georgia’s president, Mikheil Saakashvili.

Outside Poti, Russian troops were seen digging large trenches Friday morning near a bridge that provides the only access to the city. Five trucks, several armored personnel carriers and a helicopter were parked nearby. Another Russian position was seen in a wooded area outside the city.

The mayor of Poti, Vano Saginadze, said late Friday that two Russian roadblocks remained in or near the city. Poti is far from any zone that Russian troops could be allowed to be in under the cease-fire.

Georgia’s state minister on reintegration, Temur Yakobashvili, told The Associated Press the formation of a buffer zone outside South Ossetia “is absolutely illegal.”

In South Ossetia, whose capital Tskhinvali suffered the most in fighting, Russian troops were clearly establishing a long-term presence, erecting 18 peacekeeping posts in a so-called “security zone” around the border with Georgia.

Col. Gen. Anatoly Nogovitsyn, deputy head of Russia’s general staff, said Friday the move was aimed at preventing looters and Georgian arms smugglers. He said Russia still expected Georgia to try future military offensives in South Ossetia and Abkhazia, where another further 18 peacekeeping posts are to be set up.

The heavily armed soldiers that Russia calls peacekeepers have been working closely with regular Russian troops and their separatist allies against Georgian forces. A total of 2,142 Russian peacekeepers are to be deployed on the Abkhazia de facto border, while 452 will man the South Ossetia de facto border, Nogovitsyn said.

In western Georgia, a column of 83 tanks, APCs and trucks hauling artillery moved away from the Senaki military base north toward the border of Georgia’s breakaway Abkhazia region on Friday afternoon. Georgian police said the vehicles came from the base, which has been under Russian control for more than a week.

In central Georgia, at least 40 Russian military vehicles left the strategic crossroads city of Gori, heading north toward South Ossetia and Russia. Gori straddles the country’s main east-west highway south of South Ossetia, the separatist region at the heart of the fighting. After Russian forces left Gori, cranes began dismantling a Russian checkpoint.

An Associated Press reporter in Igoeti, meanwhile, confirmed that Russian forces had pulled up from their former checkpoints and roadside positions around the village. Igoeti, on the road between Gori and the Georgian capital of Tbilisi, had been the Russians’ closest position to the Georgian capital.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev had promised to have his troops out of Georgia by Friday—but a top Russian general later amended that prediction, saying it could take at least 10 days before the bulk of Russian troops and hardware could be withdrawn.

Under an EU-brokered cease-fire deal, Russian forces are to pull back to positions they held before the fighting erupted, and Western leaders have called for a complete withdrawal from Georgia. But Russia says it will keep troops it calls peacekeepers in South Ossetia and Abkhazia as well as in buffer zones stretching into Georgia proper.

(Agencies)


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6 Responses

  1. AZ Patriot (Merchant of Death)

    From civil.ge

    Bush, Sarkozy Say Russia has yet to Comply with Commitment

    U.S. President George W. Bush and French President Nicola Sarkozy spoke on the phone and have shared the opinion that “Russia is not in compliance” with its commitments under the ceasefire accord with Georgia, the White House said on August 22.

    The Russian Ministry of Defense said on Friday evening it had completed withdrawal of troops from the areas deep inside Georgia and as a result Moscow had fulfilled its commitments under ceasefire accord.

    “But we are not seeing that they are in compliance right now,” Gordon Johndroe, the White House spokesman said. “Compliance means compliance with that plan. We haven’t seen that yet.”

    “The agreement says that the Russians need to withdraw all troops and assets that entered after August the 6th, and that’s what we expect. It’s not only what we expect; that’s what the French expect, that’s what the European Union expects; frankly, it sounds like it’s just about what the whole world expects.”

    Meanwhile, Pentagon spokesman, Bryan Whitman, also said on August 22, that although some movement of Russian troops in Georgia had occurred, it was difficult to determine whether it was an indication of withdrawal or just a repositioning of forces.

    “There have been some movements around [the town of] Gory, but it’s unclear whether that is the beginning of a significant withdrawal,” Pentagon spokesman said. “The only movements we’ve seen are relatively minor.”

  2. T-Bagg

    It’s like Medvedev is poking the world in the chest saying, “What you going to do? What you gonna do?”

  3. Kurt(the infidel)

    the Russians are going to use Georgia as a forward operating base. they’re not done showing the world their little dicks. they have just started

  4. deathstar

    Snipers needed.

  5. TerribleTroy

    Looks to me like they are establishing that they are not going to give back the seperatist area to Georgia……

  6. billie (Today I'm a Georgian)

    “Outside Poti, Russian troops were seen digging large trenches Friday morning near a bridge that provides the only access to the city.”

    Are the Russians digging trenches to hide their tanks? Or for their soldiers to occupy to prevent people from entering or leaving Poti?

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