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Archanda - This is a country of literature in Georgia (country), which is invisible.

Russia warned: withdraw from Georgia, or else

Nato to hold emergency meeting amid doubts over Kremlin promise.


Russia warned: withdraw from Georgia, or else



# Ian Traynor in Brussels and Luke Harding in Tbilisi
# The Guardian,
# Monday August 18 2008

European leaders warned Russia yesterday to withdraw its forces rapidly from Georgia or face unspecified consequences, as Moscow stalled on its pledges to honour a ceasefire and pull back the thousands of troops from the Caucasus republic.

With the US and European governments due to meet tomorrow to consider their options for the first time since the crisis erupted 10 days ago, President Nicolas Sarkozy of France threatened the Kremlin with an ultimatum for the first time, warning that more delays in a pullout "would have serious consequences on relations between Russia and the European Union".

The French warning echoed similar statements from the Americans in recent days, none of which appears to have rattled the Russians, whose forces remain in firm control of large tracts of Georgia well beyond the two separatist enclaves of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

"People are going to begin to wonder if Russia can be trusted," said Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state, yesterday of Moscow's failure to keep its promises.

The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, added to the pressure on Moscow by insisting on an "urgent" retreat. She also backed Georgian aspirations to join Nato. Downing Street said it would send the foreign secretary, David Miliband, to the Georgian capital, Tbilisi, later this week.

In Moscow, President Dmitri Medvedev said Russia's troops would start withdrawing today. But there is a yawning gap between what Moscow and the west understand by withdrawal.

Yesterday, Russian forces appeared to be entrenching their positions on the ground barely 30 miles from Tbilisi.

Nato foreign ministers are to hold an emergency meeting in Brussels tomorrow on their response. The Americans could call for a suspension of the Nato-Russia council, a talking shop that goes back more than a decade and symbolises the post-cold war rapprochement that has been shaken by the invasion of Georgia.

The conflict has reopened old rifts among the western allies that recall the "old Europe-new Europe" divisions over the Iraq war in 2003.

France and Germany are keen to maintain smooth relations with Moscow and fear that the EU's mediation role will be jeopardised if they take sides.

The east Europeans in Nato and the EU are strongly on the side of Georgia, looking not to Brussels, Paris or Berlin, but to Washington for leadership. At the weekend, President Lech Kaczynski of Poland slammed France and Germany for being too soft on Moscow, and complained that they were trying to monopolise the EU position.

France was unapologetic. "We have to invent a new language with regard to Russia. That is what the European Union is trying to do," said Bernard Kouchner, the French foreign minister.

Sarkozy, the current EU president who negotiated a six-point ceasefire agreement with the Russians and Georgians last week, called for the "withdrawal, without delay, of all the Russian military forces that entered Georgia since August 7", when the fighting started.

The Russians, with an estimated 10,000 troops and 150 tanks in Georgia, show no intention of withdrawing the entire invasion force, and plan to leave troops in Georgia proper, beyond the two pro-Russian breakaway provinces. Yesterday, troops set up a series of checkpoints between Tbilisi and Gori. The first checkpoint near the town of Igoeti is less than 30 miles from the Georgian capital. Georgian drivers turned back by the Russians said they were told they needed permission from Russia's ambassador in Georgia to drive down the road - which connects the east and west of the country.

The Russian military continues to occupy around two thirds of the country, including several towns they were supposed to leave under the terms of the ceasefire deal agreed on Saturday by Medvedev.

The Kremlin said from today Russia would "begin the withdrawal of the military contingent moved to reinforce Russian peacekeepers after the Georgian aggression against South Ossetia". But it said the force would not retreat to Russia, only to South Ossetia, and that forces would stay in the "security zone."

The Russians intend to establish buffer zones in previously Georgian-controlled territory beyond South Ossetia and Abkhazia. One of the most contentious points of the Sarkozy's ceasefire plan allows Moscow "to take additional security measures" beyond the two enclaves until "an international mechanism" is established.

The "international mechanism", entailing perhaps UN-mandated international peacekeepers, will take weeks to establish at a minimum. The EU is endeavouring to be the main middleman. But apart from perhaps sending a few dozen unarmed ceasefire monitors in the days ahead, it is unlikely to grapple with the bigger issues of peacekeepers until EU foreign ministers meet in Avignon in France next month.

Georgia's president, Mikheil Saakashvili, said he would not be happy until every Russian soldier had left his country's territory. "Georgia will never give up a square kilometre of its territory," he said.

So 8.08.2008 years Europe has reacted to war....Stop Russia’s Unlawful Military Invasion in Sovereign Georgia!

Comments

PainterWoman 18. August 2008, 14:18

I read this news article this morning: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080818/wl_nm/georgia_ossetia_pullout_dc_1

Is it true? I have no idea.


I have a hard time believing everything I see on TV or read on the internet news. On TV, they do not talk about things in depth. More than a couple of minutes should be given to important issues. It seems more time is spent on talking about actors and actresses, their new babies or divorces, or their untimely deaths.

What about the untimely deaths of innocent civilians in wars?

Mikho Mosulishvili 18. August 2008, 14:41

Dear Painter Woman,
Here, in Georgia - not only buildings have destroyed also the loss of peace inhabitants, in national parks have thrown bombs and even the wood burns now...
I ask you, read on it a link - http://my.opera.com/CultureSurfer/blog/2008/08/12/russian-attack-on-georgia?cid=5866017#comment5866017

Mariya 19. August 2008, 07:00

mass media don't tell the whole truth, always only one side of the conflict, depending on the country to which it belongs. it's not that simple - the games of BIG DADDiEs

Mikho Mosulishvili 19. August 2008, 08:50

But
Besides there,
Is a fact -
Occupations of the sovereign country.
It is true.

Mariya 19. August 2008, 09:10

and a fact of killing ossete people

Mikho Mosulishvili 19. August 2008, 09:41

As it seems to me, about destruction of Chechen people with which your favorite the government has arranged, I have already told to you.

And with ossete people we lived normally centuries, without everyones intermediaries.

Mariya 19. August 2008, 10:03

I don't think that actions in Chechen republic is that we ca be proud of.

you lived together whith each other for centuries and now you will live together with Saakashvili and his American democracy. what occupation are you talking about? which one do you prefer? russian or american?
Small countries become small change between giants. That's not good

Mikho Mosulishvili 19. August 2008, 10:21

We want to be ourselves...

And please, do not overlook, that before the God all of us, notwithstanding, we from great or from the small countries, are identical.

Mariya 20. August 2008, 06:25

good luck in your hard skill of being yourself

Mikho Mosulishvili 20. August 2008, 09:15

Thank you very much...

Mariya 20. August 2008, 09:21

nice dog by the way :smile:

Mikho Mosulishvili 20. August 2008, 10:06

I am Finnegan... :)
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