News
Peacekeepers seize army base inside Georgia August 11, 2008, 20:30
Russian peacekeeping forces have taken control of Georgia’s largest airbase, about 40km from the border with Abkhazia. The Russian Defence Ministry said the troops were taking ‘preventative action’ at the base in the town of Senaki. The Georgian army is pulling in troops to Tbilisi to protect the capital from the advancing Russian forces.
Peacekeepers and other Russian land units have launched their first operation inside Georgian territory proper since Tbilisi began its offensive against the breakaway republic of South Ossetia last week.
A spokesman for the Defence Ministry confirmed the incursion, which was first reported by Georgia’s Internal Ministry.
“Russian peacekeepers and military units attached to them are taking action to prevent Georgia from shelling South Ossetia and Russian peacekeepers,” he said.
Подпись Map of the region
Another objective of the operation is to prevent ‘a build-up of additional volunteers and reservists’ mobilized to continue military operations the breakaway republics.
Earlier reports indicated that Abkhazian troops supported by Russian fighter planes had taken control of a village in Georgia’s Zugdidi region. But Abkhazian sources have denied the reports.
Meanwhile, news channels CNN and the BBC are reporting that the Georgian town of Gori has been captured by Russian troops. Both channels are quoting the Georgian foreign minister. These reports have not been confirmed by any source.
Medvedev compares Georgia to Nazi Germany
While talking to Russian MPs on Monday, President Dmitry Medevev drew a clear parallel between the current Georgian regime and Nazi Germany.
The President said Russia is not going to “pacify the aggressor” as Europe did in 1938, by signing the Munich treaty with Hitler. “We all know to what tragic consequences this led,” he said.
Dmitry Medvedev also described the Russian military operation in South Ossetia as “the only appropriate and absolutely effective” response.
U.S. starts evacuating embassy staff from Tbilisi
Meanwhile, the U.S. has begun evacuating the families of its diplomats from Georgia. They are being sent to Armenia as a precaution, according to the U.S. Embassy in the Armenian capital Yerevan.
U.S. ambassador John Tefft and his team of diplomats will continue their work in Tbilisi.
http://www.russiatoday.com/news/news/28829


