August 08, 2008
Large-Scale Fighting Erupts In South Ossetia
by RFE/RL
Georgia says its soldiers have seized the "greater part" of South Ossetia after heavy fighting erupted overnight in the breakaway region. The "total mobilization" of Georgia's military forces was ordered, and Russian troops have entered South Ossetia, raising fears of a full-blown military conflict.
Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili has said a Russian armored column with 150 vehicles has now entered South Ossetian territory. He also said Georgian forces earlier shot down two Russian warplanes.
"I would like to let the whole world know that there is a large-scale military aggression going on against Georgia," Saakashvili said. "During the last minutes and hours, Georgia has been bombed from the Russian Federation's side. Populated areas, peaceful spaces, have been bombed -- and this is nothing less than international aggression in its classical sense."
Georgian forces had pounded the capital of South Ossetia, Tskhinvali, in a large-scale operation to regain control of the Moscow-backed province. The separatist leadership says at least 15 civilians were killed in the fighting, while Russia is claiming that at least 10 of its peacekeepers have been killed. Georgia has reported eight deaths, without specifying if they were military or civilian.
'Air Attacks'Georgia's Saakashvili said most of South Ossetia had been "liberated." He accused Russia of conducting air attacks on Georgian territory and ordered a full-scale mobilization of military reservists.
Georgian authorities confirmed that Russian tanks had entered South Ossetia and were advancing toward Tskhinvali. They also accused Russian aircraft of attacking a military base near the Georgian capital.
According to Tbilisi, Georgian forces downed four Russian military aircraft and fought two convoys of mercenaries that reportedly entered the province from Russia.
Georgian National Security Council Secretary Kakha Lomaia said the fighting had claimed lives among Georgian civilians.
"Responding to the unilateral cease-fire declared by President Saakashvili and his offer for peace talks and negotiations, the separatists launched artillery fire against the villages of Tamarasheni and Prisi," Lomaia said. "According to our data, there are casualties amongst the peaceful population."
A commander of the Russian peacekeepers in South Ossetia, Igor Konashenkov, said that at least 10 of his troops had been killed and 30 wounded as a result of Georgia shelling.
Cease-FireSaakashvili had announced a
unilateral truce on August 7. But just two hours later, Tbilisi sent troops into South Ossetia, claiming separatists were shelling Georgian-populated villages.
Tbilisi said the operation would continue until a "durable peace" was reached.
South Ossetian officials were quick to condemn the offensive and pour scorn on the cease-fire announcement by Saakashvili.
Speaking to journalists in Moscow, South Ossetia's representative in the Russian capital, Dmitry Medoyev, dismissed the declared truce as a "smokescreen."
"This was a planned action. These speeches about peace and friendship and not restarting military action were simply a smokescreen after which followed what we see today," Medoyev said. "We hope that the Georgian side will reconsider and return to the negotiating table, although a lot of blood has been shed."
Vladimir Pletnyov, a Russian television journalist who traveled to Tskhinvali late on August 7, told RFE/RL's Russian Service that at 4 a.m. on August 7, "something awful happened."