August 01, 2006
Georgia: Extent Of 'Victory' In Kodori Offensive Unclear
by Liz Fuller
Georgian soldiers leaving the gorge on July 29. Some have questioned their performance. (InterPressNews)
PRAGUE, August 1, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Georgian officials have sought to
present last week's incursion into the Kodori Gorge as a major
territorial gain. But such claims gloss over the Georgian failure to
apprehend former Kodori Governor Emzar Kvitsiani, whose defiance of the
Georgian authorities served as the catalyst for what Tbilisi claims was
simply a police operation.
Speaking on national television on July 28, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili said that Georgia now "directly controls a very important strategic part of the territory of Abkhazia," and will "establish Georgian jurisdiction and constitutional order in the heart" of that breakaway region.
Georgian Defense Minister Irakli Okruashvili said the same day that "practically the whole of the gorge is under the control of the police."
Such claims are, however, an exaggeration, insofar as Georgia has merely extended its control over the upper reaches of the gorge -- formerly a no-man's-land controlled by Kvitsiani's Monadire (Hunter) militia -- as far as the border between Abkhazia and the rest of Georgia.
Kristian Bzhania, a spokesman for Abkhaz President Sergei Bagapsh, derided the Georgian claims, telling regnum.ru that "we have another word for what Saakashvili calls the heart."
Bagapsh himself warned when the Georgian forces first entered Kodori that he would mobilize his army if the Georgian contingent actually advanced onto Abkhaz territory.
Georgian Military Performance QuestionedSaakashvili and Okruashvili praised the conduct of the Kodori operation, which was supervised by Okruashvili and Interior Minister Vano Merabishvili personally as both army and Interior Ministry troops took part. (Okruashvili subsequently clarified the division of responsibilities between the Defense and the Interior ministries, saying that the latter carried out the operation and the armed forces merely provided "logistical support," according to "Novye izvestia," as cited on August 1 by apsny.ru.)
Former Governor Emzar Kvitsiani (InterPressNews, undated)
U.S. military personnel in Georgia described the Georgian troops' performance to one Washington analyst as less than stellar, noting that morale among the Georgian servicemen was not good and that at one point the operation was halted due to "inclement weather conditions."