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Russian Soldiers Leave S. Georgia, Others Deployed In The North

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  • Russian Soldiers Leave S. Georgia, Others Deployed In The North

    RUSSIAN SOLDERS LEAVE SOUTH GEORGIA, OTHERS DEPLOYED IN THE NORTH
    By Pavel Felgenhauer

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Nov 14 2007

    This week Russian military officially transfer control of Russia's
    last significant permanent military base in southern Georgia. The base
    was located along the Black Sea at Batumi, home of a major Caspian
    oil-exporting terminal near the Turkish border. On Thursday November
    15, the last train, carrying the last Russian solders and military
    equipment, will leave Batumi bound for the Russian base at Gyumri in
    Armenia (RIA-Novosti, November 13).

    During the Cold War Batumi was the home base of a frontline armored
    motor-rifle division facing Turkey and NATO. After the Soviet
    Union collapsed in 1991, Russian troops were withdrawn from forward
    positions in Central and Eastern Europe to Russian territory. Four
    former Soviet bases remained in the Caucasus: two bases in Georgia
    (Batumi and Akhalkalaki) and two in Armenia (Gyumri and Yerevan). In
    2004, the base in Batumi had 2,590 military personnel, 74 tanks,
    120 heavy guns, and 80 combat armored vehicles. While the number
    of military personnel was relatively small, significant amounts of
    equipment and heavy arms were stockpiled. The base in Akhalkalaki
    housed 2,000 military personnel, 40 tanks, 50 heavy guns, and 130
    combat armored vehicles (Nezavisimoe voennoe obozrenie, August 20,
    2004). The Russian military retained the option to airlift military
    personnel into these bases to swiftly expand its divisions in Batumi
    and Akhalkalaki into full-strength if needed.

    Under a 2005 agreement, the Russian military agreed to fully close
    their bases during 2008, but the withdrawal is actually ahead of
    schedule. The headquarters of the Russian forces in the South Caucasus
    in Tbilisi closed in December 2006, the base in Akhalkalaki closed
    in June 2007, and the base in Batumi will follow this week.

    There are six small non-combat military installations left in Georgia
    that will be handed over to the Georgians in the coming days. The
    commander of the North Caucasian Military District, General Alexander
    Baranov, who is also in overall command of Russian forces in the
    Caucasus, has announced that by December 1, "There will be not a
    single Russian solder left in Georgia" (Interfax, November 10).

    This is not entirely true. There are Russian peacekeepers deployed
    on Georgian territory, some 500 in South Ossetia and over 1,500 in
    Abkhazia. The Russian military has announced that the base in Gudauta,
    Abkhazia, has closed, but it has not been transferred to the Georgians
    and is still used by peacekeepers, which the Georgian government does
    not consider welcome on its sovereign territory.

    In recent years the bases in Batumi and Akhalkalaki and other
    military installations in Georgia have become a serious strategic
    liability. In the event of a major confrontation with Tbilisi over
    Abkhazia and/or South Ossetia, the Georgians could have easily overrun
    the relatively small and isolated Russian military installations
    in Georgia. The troops in Batumi and Akhalkalaki were mostly local
    people employed as Russian contract solders and likely would offer
    only token resistance. The Russian officers could have been taken
    prisoner and significant stockpiles of arms, munitions, and military
    supplies could have been captured, significantly boosting Georgia's
    fighting potential.

    Now the men, tanks, and guns have been moved to safety, mostly into
    Armenia, but will still be deployed in the South Caucasus. The sudden
    haste of the final withdrawal from Georgia is not at all a good sign:
    With the dilapidated bases on the Turkish border out of the way,
    Russia may take on the Georgians in Abkhazia and South Ossetia more
    aggressively.

    In the latest major incident, on October 30 Russian peacekeepers
    disarmed and harassed several Georgian policemen in the Zugdidi area
    on the border with breakaway Abkhazia (see EDM, November 1). Georgian
    President Mikheil Saakashvili told me in Tbilisi on November 3 that
    several of the Russian peacekeepers involved in the Zugdidi incident
    were in fact Chechen fighters in Russian army uniforms, members of
    the kadyrovtsy, former Chechen rebels that changed sides to serve
    pro-Kremlin Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov. In the Abkhaz-Georgian war
    of 1992-93, a battalion of Chechen rebel volunteers led by warlord
    Shamil Basaev fought against the Georgians, supplied and supported
    by Russian troops. After 1994 the Chechen Abkhaz war veterans, led
    by Basaev, turned to fight the Russians. Saakashvili was dismayed
    that Moscow is again arming and sending Chechen fighters into Georgia.

    This week Georgian Minister for Conflict Resolution David Bakaradze
    announced that Russia had illegally moved 200 solders, five tanks,
    four Grad multiple rocket launchers, five armored personnel carriers
    (APCs), and seven howitzers into the Ochamchira region of Abkhazia,
    while the mandate of Russian peacekeepers allows only APCs. The Russian
    and Abkhaz military promptly and fully denied any such deployment
    (Interfax, November 12). Appearing on an NTV talk show Sunday November
    11, Kremlin-connected political analyst and prominent ruling United
    Russia party member Vyacheslav Nikonov (grandson of Soviet leader
    Vyacheslav Molotov), announced, "Additional Russian troops must be
    deployed in Abkhazia and South Ossetia to deter a Georgian attack
    and defend Russian citizens." Nikonov is expected to win a seat in
    the December 2 Duma elections and may become chairman of the Duma
    Foreign Relations Committee.

    The "preventive" deployment of additional Russian troops, including
    Chechen fighters in Georgia may be underway, while officially "the
    last solders are leaving." Instead of preventing armed conflict,
    such redeployment may in fact provoke war.
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