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Georgian Flag Raised Over Akhalkalaki

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  • Georgian Flag Raised Over Akhalkalaki

    GEORGIAN FLAG RAISED OVER AKHALKALAKI
    By Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    July 2 2007

    Akhalkalaki military base The flag of Georgia has been flying
    over the Akhalkalaki military base since June 27, with Georgian
    troops moving onto the base to replace the last Russian troops. The
    commander of the Group of Russian Forces in the Transcaucasus (GRVZ),
    Maj.-General Andrei Popov, and Georgia's First Deputy Defense Minister,
    Maj.-General Levan Nikolaishvili, signed the handover documents on
    that day, as Russian troops completed the evacuation of materiel from
    the sprawling base.

    Fixed assets handed over to the Georgians include 196 buildings on an
    area of 128 hectares as well as a nearby combat training range. The
    last 150 Russian troops left on the eve of the official handover. The
    evacuation of materiel and troops began in late 2004 on an ad-hoc
    basis and continued from mid-2006 onward in accordance with an agreed
    timetable. The Russians have completed it three months ahead of the
    October 2007 deadline.

    While some of the materiel and troops have been evacuated to Russia,
    a considerable quantity of hardware has been transferred to the
    Russian base at Gyumri in Armenia -- a move that raises concern
    in Azerbaijan. The Russian arsenals at Gyumri are steadily growing
    through transfers of heavy weaponry from Russian bases in Georgia.

    The Georgian-Russian agreements prohibit the transfer of that weaponry
    to Armenian forces by Russia. However, compliance with the ban and
    indeed the actual basing location of that hardware, once it reaches
    Armenia, is difficult to verify.

    The Imperial Russian Army built the Akhalkalaki base in 1910 from
    an earlier military outpost near the Ottoman border. The base was
    expanded to accommodate up to 15,000 Soviet troops during the Cold
    War. Its missions included launching offensive operations into Turkey
    in the event of actual war.

    After the Soviet Union's collapse, the Akhalkalaki base became the
    main employer and for the local ethnic Armenian-majority population
    and main buyer of goods and services. Russian authorities in Moscow
    and in the theater instigated local Armenians at times to demonstrate
    against the closure of the base and even to block the evacuation
    path of military convoys. However, such incidents stopped in 2006
    when Russia began implementing its agreement with Georgia on the
    withdrawal of Russian forces.

    The evacuation process continues from Russia's base at Batumi, where
    800 Russian soldiers remain. Under the withdrawal schedule, the ninth
    railroad train left Batumi on June 28 for Russia and the tenth is
    scheduled to leave at the beginning of July for the Russian base at
    Gyumri in Armenia. The materiel aboard these trains includes tanks,
    various types of armored vehicles, and artillery systems as well as
    infantry equipment. Ten more trains and one more motor convoy are to
    be sent from Batumi until the end of 2007. The base is due to close
    before the end of 2008.

    >>From 1991 through 2005, Russia stonewalled the negotiations on
    troop withdrawal, attempting to prolong its presence at Akhalkalaki
    and Batumi indefinitely. Even after the signing of the 1999 Istanbul
    agreements on troop withdrawal, Russia wanted at least another decade
    to close these two bases and demanded hundreds of millions of dollars
    as compensation for relocating the troops and materiel in Russia. The
    only Istanbul commitment that Russia fulfilled on time was the handover
    of the Vaziani base and airport near Tbilisi in 2001.

    The 2003 regime change in Georgia and the reestablishment of
    effective Georgian sovereignty in Ajaria changed the negotiations
    fundamentally. Moscow understood that the location of Akhalkalaki
    and Batumi, deep inside Georgian territory, meant that the bases
    could be isolated and even blockaded if Russia refused to honor its
    obligation to close them down. This realization -- as well as the
    loss of real military value of these bases -- led Moscow to agree to
    evacuate them. The withdrawal process is governed by the May 30, 2005,
    Joint Statement and March 31, 2006, implementing agreements, which
    were signed, respectively, by Russia's Minister of Foreign Affairs
    Sergei Lavrov and Ground Forces Commander-in-Chief Colonel-General
    Alexei Maslov, with Georgia's then-minister of foreign affairs Salome
    Zourabichvili and then-first deputy defense minister Mamuka Kudava.

    These documents stipulate a precise timetable for withdrawal, with
    interim deadlines to be met (see EDM, June 3, 2005; April 4, 2006).

    On Christmas Day, December 25, 2006, the last personnel of Russia's
    garrison in Tbilisi and the rump GRVZ Headquarters pulled out of
    Georgia's capital and of the country altogether. That move brought
    to a close more than 200 years of the Russian garrisoning of Tbilisi.

    The imperial Russian army under General Ivan Lazarev occupied Tbilisi
    in November 1799, using the easy invasion route from Ossetia. The
    sprawling ex-GRVZ complex is located on prime real estate grounds in
    downtown Tbilisi, in proximity to the main government institutions
    (see EDM, January 2).

    As part of its 1999 commitments, enshrined in the CFE Treaty's Final
    Act at that year's Istanbul summit, Russia was to close the Gudauta
    base, evacuate the personnel and equipment, and hand the base over
    to Georgia by July 1, 2001. However, Russia retains the base to the
    present day, albeit with a reduced garrison (see EDM, June 18). While
    giving Russia due credit for evacuating the Batumi and Akhalkalaki
    bases and the Tbilisi headquarters -- even ahead of the 2005-stipulated
    deadlines -- Georgia calls for complete fulfillment of the CFE Treaty
    and Istanbul Commitments regarding the Gudauta base.
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