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Another View of
Russia’s Invasion of Georgia
Georgia 'overrun' by Russian
troops as full-scale ground invasion begins
By Daily Mail Reporter
Georgian officials tonight claimed the country had been 'overrun' by
Russian troops after a full-scale ground invasion.
Amid reports that Moscow forces had taken the town of Gori - and were
marching on the capital Tsblisi - Georgian soldiers appeared to be in
full retreat.
Troops were apparently in complete chaos as a full-scale rout pushed
them back through the countryside.
Meanwhile, the civilian crisis intensified with thousands of refugees
fleeing the seemingly unstoppable advance of the Russian army.
Around 9,000 soldiers and 350 tanks had been massing at a base in the
border region of Abkhazia throughout the day.
But the huge force has now moved into Georgia proper, demolishing hopes
of a rapid solution to an increasingly bitter conflict.
The invasion comes as Gordon Brown urges Russia to call a ceasefire.
The Prime Minister warned Russia there was 'no justification' for its
military action in Georgia.
Mr Brown issued a strongly-worded statement after Georgia backed an EU
peace plan for the breakaway province of South Ossetia amid continued
fighting.
'There is no justification for continued Russian military action in
Georgia, which threatens the stability of the entire region and risks a
humanitarian catastrophe,' he said.
'There is an immediate and pressing need to end the fighting and
disengage all military forces in South Ossetia.
'The Georgian government has offered a ceasefire, which I urge the
Russians to reciprocate without delay.'
Meanwhile, intense shelling continued in the breakaway region of South
Ossetia where hostilities broke out last Friday.
There were also conflicting reports that Russian troops had overrun the
city of Gori while Georgian forces were concentrating on holding
Mtskheta, 15 miles from the capital.
Earlier in the day, Russian premier Vladimir Putin raised the stakes
over the conflict by lashing out at the U.S. as the fighting continued
to escalate in the region.
The Russian prime minister rejected calls from Georgia for a ceasefire
and declared that his country would pursue its mission to its 'logical
conclusion'.
A day after a face-to-face meeting with President George W. Bush in
Beijing who expressed 'grave concern', Mr Putin accused the U.S. of
siding with Georgia by ferrying Georgian troops from Iraq to the battle
zone.
'It is a shame that some of our partners are not helping us but,
essentially, are hindering us,' said Mr Putin. 'The very scale of this
cynicism is astonishing.'
Russian Defence ministry spokeswoman Nana Intskerveli confirmed tanks
had seized a Georgian military base in the western town of Senaki.
The statement indicated Russian troops had entered the region from a
second rebel province of Abkhazia, where troops have been massing since
the weekend.
There are concerns a new front away from South Ossetia could open up
around Abkhazi, which would represent a major escalation in the
conflict.
Thousands of troops, dozens of tanks and Hurricane multiple rocket
launchers were seen pouring along roads to the south of Russia.
Russian warplanes also launched new attacks inside Georgia today, one on
the outskirts of the capital and another on the Black Sea port of Poti.
Officials in the breakaway region today claimed Georgian troops had also
resumed shelling there after its calls for a ceasefire were ignored by
Russia.
President Bush warned Mr Putin of his 'grave concern' about the
'disproportionate' military intervention at a face-to-face meeting in
Beijing yesterday.
His Vice-President Dick Cheney also personally called the Georgian
President Mikheil Saakashvili over the weekend to reassure him his
country has U.S backing.
Amid fears Moscow intends to seize the whole country to gain control of
its crucial oil pipelines, Mr Cheney declared Russian military action
'must not go unanswered'.
In a statement, he added: 'Its continuation would have serious
consequences for its relations with the United States, as well as the
broader international community.'
Russia appeared to be totally defying the U.S. warning today, with
Georgia claiming up to 50 Russian jets were roaming its skies ready to
strike.
Mr Putin and Russian President, Dimitry Medvedev, attended a summit with
senior generals at the Kremlin today for a council of war.
President Medvedev announced later that its military operations in South
Ossetia were 'nearing conclusion'.
'A major part of operations to force the Georgian side, the Georgian
authorities, into peace in South Ossetia has been completed.'
Russia was also reported to have sent more paratroopers into Abkhazia
where it now has more than 9,000 soldiers as well as tanks and armoured
vehicles.
Georgia claimed Gen. Sergei Chaban, who is in charge of Russian
peacekeepers in Abkhazia, had warned their forces must disarm or face
Russian troops there as well as in South Ossetia where the conflict
began on Friday.
A ground invasion launched from Abkhazia would be a drastic step, and
almost impossible for Georgia to counter with most of its troops still
near South Ossetia.
It was also alleged dozens of Russian bombers were attacking targets
inside Georgian territory, including around Tbilisi.
Russian officials said the air raids were targeting supply lines and
military facilities and were not directed at civilians but one in Gori
on Saturday killed more than 20 and wounded scores of others.
Meanwhile NATO also joined the condemnation today, accusing Russia of
using excessive force and violating Georgia's territory by taking the
military action beyond South Ossetia.
Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer was 'seriously concerned about
the disproportionate use of force by the Russians and the lack of
respect for the territorial integrity of Georgia,' a spokesman said.
'The military operations that we saw on Saturday and since then,
including air and missile attacks, have no relation to and go well
beyond the CIS peacekeeping operation.'
But diplomatic efforts to secure a ceasefire were continuing with French
Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner leading a delegation from the European
Union asking for a 'controlled withdrawal of troops'.
In further developments, Russia accused Georgia of killing three of its
troops in the shelling on the South Ossetian capatal Tskhinvali and
claimed another two of its planes had been shot down.
A separate Council of Europe delegation lead by Sweden's foreign
minister was also on its way to the Georgian capital for talks.
Georgia claimed yesterday to have pulled out its troops from South
Ossetia and was calling for a ceasefire.
The demand was rejected by the Kremlin, which said it did not believe
the Georgian forces had actually retreated.
The region is an international flashpoint, given its vital position in
terms of oil supplies which run from the Caspian Sea to Europe through
the small country.
It is feared the Kremlin could be using the conflict to disrupt fuel
supplies, which would make the West even more dependent on Russian oil.
The U.S. has refused to indicate what it may do if the fighting
continues and Russia refuses to back down.
State-controlled Russian television claim more than 2,000 people have
been killed in South Ossetia and thousands made homeless.
And a Georgian government source said yesterday that 130 civilians and
military personnel had been killed and 1,165 wounded, many because of
Russian bombing.
The smaller country's withdrawal from South Ossetia left Russian troops
in control. Many towns were deserted with reports of 40,000 fleeing
across the war zone.
Some 50 ambulances were ferrying wounded Georgian troops from South
Ossetia to hospitals in neighbouring cities, all of which were already
overcrowded.
Russian television showed Tskhinvali's main hospital in ruins and most
of the more than 230 patients crammed into the basement.
A few bare lightbulbs provided scant illumination and the report said
the hospital had no ready supply of water.
Some patients sat listlessly on beds jammed into a tiny, dim area with
unfinished walls.
Russia's Defence Ministry also claimed yesterday to have sunk a Georgian
missile boat that was trying to attack its navy in the Black Sea.
South Ossetia, which unlike Georgia proper, is loyal to Russia -
provided the catalyst for the dispute.
Pro-Moscow rebels provoked Georgia's president into ordering his troops
into South Ossetia last week.
Mr Putin's government then retaliated with a counter-offensive to seize
back the disputed region.
However, the escalation of violence has led to concerns that Russia
could try to annex the entire country.
'They want the whole of Georgia,' claimed President Saakashvili. 'The
Russians need control over energy routes from central Asia and the
Caspian Sea.
'In addition, they want to get rid of us, they want regime change. Every
democratic movement in this neighbouring region must be got rid of.'
Russian planes yesterday bombed the main civilian airport in the capital
Tbilisi, which is used by British Airways and other Western airlines.
A government official said the Russian air strike appeared to have been
aimed at the nearby military airport and an aviation construction plant.
'It turns out they hit both military and civilian airports,' the
spokesman added.
The attack came hours before the arrival of the French foreign minister
on a peace mission.
'We don't want the conflict to spread in a region which is extremely
volatile and dangerous,' Mr Kouchner told reporters.
Despite the attempts of the international community to calm the crisis,
Mr Putin was bullish last night, blaming Georgia for creating a
'humanitarian catastrophe'.
He appeared on TV listening to two young women from an Ossetian village
who claimed that Georgian soldiers herded 50 people into a house and
burned them alive.
One of them said: 'My friend was a witness of a Georgian tank driving
over an elderly woman with two kids.'
Putin replied: 'They are completely mad. It's genocide.' He later
claimed that Georgia had lost the right to rule the region, implying the
Russians were set for a long and probably permanent occupation of both
South Ossetia and Abkhazia.
It is clear that Moscow is intent on severely hampering Georgia's
military capability, which has been built up with Western help.
Crucial strategic sites in the port of Poti, the city of Gori - staging
post to South Ossetia - and around Tbilisi have been taken out by the
Russian air force.
Worst-hit was the capital of the separatist region, Tskhinvali, but
death and devastation was wreaked across the region, as well as in
cities in Georgia.
Western concerns about Moscow's desire to control the region's oil
supply were yesterday gathering strength.
While Georgia does not produce oil itself, U.S. and European energy
firms have counted on the pro-Western country - sandwiched between
Russia and Iran - to host a pipeline for oil and gas exports from
Azerbaijan.
The head of Azerbaijan's state oil company warned that exports had
already been halted via the Georgian ports of Batumi and Kulevi due to
the fighting.
The announcement came shortly after Russian warplanes staged a raid near
the 1,109-mile BTC pipeline, the world's second longest.
BP, a partner in this project, was seeking information on the reports.
Some analysts believe Russia provoked Georgia's attack on South Ossetia,
knowing that the smaller country could not win the resulting conflict.
Others say that Moscow was simply drawing a red line around areas with
pro-Russian populations which it would not allow to be controlled by
pro-Western states.
The regions of Ossetia and Abkhazia are culturally and linguistically
distinct from Georgia, and broke away from it during brief wars in the
early 1990s.
CLAIM AND COUNTERCLAIM: COUNTRIES DEATH TOLLS
RUSSIA
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin said on Sunday that more
than 2,000 people, mostly Russian citizens, had died in the conflict
zone.
On Saturday Russian Ambassador to Georgia Vyacheslav Kovalenko said at
least 2,000 civilians had died in Tskhinvali alone as a result of
fighting between Russian and Georgian forces, according to Interfax news
agency. He said 13 Russian peacekeepers were killed and up to 70 injured
in the fighting.
Sergei Sobyanin, the Russian government chief of staff, said 30,000
South Ossetian refugees had fled to Russia since early on Friday.
GEORGIA
Kakha Lomaia, the National Security Council secretary, said on Sunday
that 40 civilians had been killed and more than 200 wounded but gave no
details.
A source in the Georgian government told Reuters on Saturday 129
Georgian civilians and military were killed and 748 wounded.
Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili said Russian aerial bombing had
killed around 30 Georgian soldiers.
SOUTH OSSETIA
South Ossetia's President Eduard Kokoity on Friday said about 1,400
people had died in Tskinvali.
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