ACCUSED OF SELLING ARMS TO GEORGIA:

SUMMARY:

  • (8/5) Russia on Wednesday accused the United States of quietly rearming Georgia a year after Russian forces crushed the ex-Soviet state's US-backed military and warned it would respond accordingly. Delivery of weapons from the United States is continuing," Deputy Foreign Minister Grigori Karasin told journalists at a briefing ahead of the first anniversary of the 2008 Russia-Georgia war.
  • (8/4) “Washington is playing the key role in rearming the Georgian military machine," Grigory Karasin, a deputy foreign minister, said in comments reported Tuesday by the Interfax agency. "It would be in the interests of Georgian democracy ... to refuse to arm this country at all."
  • (7/27) Russian-backed South Ossetian President Eduard Kokoity accused the United States, Ukraine and Israel of aiding genocide by supplying weapons to Georgia to incite military actions against the breakaway region.“The United States, Ukraine and Israel bear a heavy responsibility for the genocide of the Ossetian people.” Kokoity said in a televised broadcast on Russia Today. “They are arming Georgia to the teeth and holding more military exercises.”
  • (8/6) Russia calls on the international community to stop supplies of any kind of arms to Georgia - not only offensive, but also all other military systems, RF Foreign Ministry spokesman Andrei Nesterenko said on the Vesti news television channel on Thursday in connection with the anniversary of tragic events in South Ossetia.
  • (8/5) South Ossetia's rebel leader Eduard Kokoity accused the EU observers on Wednesday of giving "tacit approval" to Georgia's military build-up along the tiny enclave's de facto borders with Georgia, Interfax quoted him as saying.
  • (7/23) "Russia will take "concrete measures" to prevent Georgia from re-arming after its war with Moscow last year, ITAR-TASS news agency quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin as saying on Thursday. “We have a deep worry regarding the activity of the Georgian leadership over remilitarising its country, which several states are responding to in a surprisingly calm and positive way" Karasin said, in comments directed at Tbilisi's allies. "In the event of foreign states supplying Georgia with arms and war equipment -- from Russia, or Soviet-developed, or produced by Russians or Soviets -- we will consider the question of limiting or stopping military-technical or military-economic development with these states", Tass quoted Karasin as saying. Karasin did not name any country but Moscow has previously expressed anger at Ukraine for selling weapons to Georgia which Russia says were used against it during the fighting. The Russian official also took aim at countries he said were concealing military aid under the guise of humanitarian programmes. "In recent months, we have observed efforts by some states to act in an underhand way to conceal military cooperation with the Georgian side, which includes masking it under the guise of 'humanitarian aid' to overcome the consequences of the conflict", Karasin said.
  • (7/24—from Moscow Times) Countries that have supplied such arms to Georgia include the Czech Republic, Poland, Bulgaria, Uzbekistan and Ukraine, which Biden visited before arriving in Georgia as part of a weeklong tour aimed at assuring both countries that they had nothing to fear from Washington’s efforts to improve ties with Moscow.

ACTUAL ARMS SALES TO GEORGIA:

Ukraine

  • Ukraine admitted it still supplies Georgia with weapons, RIA Novosti reports alluding to The Vedomosti newspaper.
  • Yesterday Eduard Kokoyty, the leader of South Ossetia, claimed that the USA, Ukraine and Israel still supply armaments to Georgia. In early July Sergei Bondarchuk, Ukrspecexport director general, in his interview to The Syogodni newspaper stated that the company had complied and complied with the weapon supplies contracts.
  • But Ukraine really supplied weapons even after war - to comply with the contracts signed in early 2008: twentyT-72B tanks, also, possibly, several dozens of APC -70 DI and antitank missiles.


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Israel

  • Israel's relations with Georgia have been close, partly because there is a large Georgian Jewish community in Israel. In recent years, ties have also taken on a military dimension, with military industries in Israel supplying Georgia with some 200 million dollars worth of equipment since 2000. This has included remotely piloted planes, rockets, night-vision equipment, other electronic systems and training by former senior Israeli officers.
  • Israel is not a major supplier of arms to Georgia, with the U.S. and France supplying Tbilisi with most of its weaponry. But the arms transfers have attracted media attention partly because of the role played by some high-profile Israeli figures, including former Tel Aviv mayor Roni Milo, who conducted business in Georgia on behalf of Israel Military Industries.
  • Further attention was drawn to the Israel-Georgia arms trade earlier this year when a Russian jet shot down an Israeli-made drone being operated by the Georgians.


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US
Russian forces have seized a “large arsenal” of U.S.-made weapons in the western Georgian city of Senaki including hundreds of assault rifles, a military spokesman said Friday. “In Senaki, we seized a large arsenal of weapons including 664 U.S.-made M-16 rifles” and a number of M-40 sniper rifles, General Anatoly Nogovitsyn told a news conference in Moscow. “There were 1,728 weapons total.

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Other

  • Georgia has bought from Bosnia and Herzegovina a shipment of long-range 262-millimetre reactive systems for fusillade M-87 Orkan MLRS. Besides, seven GradLAR MLRS, used for shooting in 13 directions at a time at a distance of up to 45 km, were bought from Israel, from the Czech Republic – six MLRS RM-70.
  • What is more, from Ukraine and the CzechRepublic, AGS-17 “Plamya” from Ukraine, anti-mechanized flame throwers “Fagot”, fabricated in Bulgaria and licensed in the times of the Soviet Union.
  • As part of its rigorous rearmament program, Georgia purchased 30 towed (122-mm D-30) and 12 self-propelled (152-mm “Dana”) howitzers from the Czech Republic in 2006; 6 Mi-24B/P and 2 Mi-8MT assault helicopters from Ukraine in 2005; 31 T-72 main battle tanks from Ukraine and the Czech
  • Republic in 2005; 25 120-mm mortars from the Czech Republic and Bosnia also in 2005; 20 BTR-80 armored personnel carriers from Ukraine in 2005; 12 self-propelled 152-mm 2S3M howitzers from Ukraine in 2004; one Mi-35 assault helicopter from Uzbekistan in 2004; 40 BMP-2 APCs from Ukraine in 2004; 14 120-mm mortars from Bulgaria in 2004; 6 122 mm RM-70 MLRS systems from the Czech Republic in 2003; and other heavy weapons, including fast attack craft, more mortars, howitzers and helicopters. (Source: Jane's Sentinel Security Assessment, August 2008; see the complete list of Georgia's weapons acquisitions since 2000 at the end of this article).


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Russia accuses US of rearming Georgia

By Alissa de Carbonnel (AFP) – 1 day ago

MOSCOW — Russia on Wednesday accused the United States of quietly rearming Georgia a year after Russian forces crushed the ex-Soviet state's US-backed military and warned it would respond accordingly.

"Delivery of weapons from the United States is continuing," Deputy Foreign Minister Grigori Karasin told journalists at a briefing ahead of the first anniversary of the 2008 Russia-Georgia war.

"This is worrisome and will force us to take corresponding measures," Karasin said. He did not elaborate on what types of weapons were involved or on how Russia would respond.

His comments however marked one of Moscow's most pointed accusations that the United States, which recently reaffirmed a strategic commitment to Georgia, was stoking tensions in the volatile Caucasus region.

On a visit to Tbilisi on July 23, US Vice President Joe Biden admitted that Washington, which equipped and trained Georgian forces prior to the war last August, was working on "maintaining" the Georgian military.

He said however that the effort was confined to "planning, training, organization" -- and not the supply of weapons.

The following day, Russia's ambassador to NATO said Moscow would impose sanctions on US or any other foreign firms that sold arms to Georgia.

"No one can give us any guarantee there will be no new aggression from Georgia," Karasin said at the press conference Wednesday.

A top Russian general separately said Russia could "clearly see" that Georgia was rearming and trying to rebuild its armed forces "to previous levels and higher" than what it had prior to last year's war.

The general, Anatoly Nogovitsin, said this effort was "for the purpose of aggression" and was being supported by the United States and other Western countries at least financially and through "declarations" of support.

"This is being done not as openly as in the past ... but using a clandestine scheme," Nogovitsin said, adding: "Such supplies are still continuing."

The secretary of Georgia's national security council, Eka Tkeshelashvili, dismissed Russia's accusations that Georgia was rearming as a "ridiculous perception" concocted in Moscow to foster a "myth" of Georgian aggression.

The United States has long supported the goal of Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili to lead his country away from its centuries-old dominance by Moscow and toward membership in NATO and Western political institutions.

The Kremlin however has made clear -- most dramatically during the war in Georgia last year -- that it regards expanding NATO influence in ex-Soviet states near Russian borders as a major and direct security threat.

Russia and the West are in intensifying competition for influence in Georgia due to its vital location astride a geographical corridor that could be used to transport energy supplies from Central Asia directly to Western markets.

Late Tuesday, Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev discussed the situation in the Caucasus as the Georgia war anniversary approaches, with both men agreeing on the need to reduce tensions there, the White House said.

The Kremlin confirmed the conversation but injected a slightly different spin regarding its purpose.

"Both sides underscored the need to preserve a relationship of trust between the two presidents and their teams," the Kremlin said in a statement.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov meanwhile lauded the work of the EU monitoring mission in Georgia as a "stabilizing factor" in the area.

He said it would be "incorrect" and provocative however to include US personnel in the European mission.

Separately, Nogovitsin brushed off a report in The New York Times that two Russian nuclear attack submarines were recently patrolling near the east coast of the United States.

He did not confirm nor deny details of the patrols, but stated: "The fleet can't remain in port. This is a normal process."

He said Russia had similar data on movements of US strategic forces near Russian borders.

Copyright © 2009 AFP. All rights reserved. More »

Kokoity Accuses Georgian Allies of Helping Ossetian Genocide / /
July 27, 2009
By Helena Bedwell
July 27 (Bloomberg) -- Russian-backed South Ossetian President Eduard Kokoity accused the United States, Ukraine and Israel of aiding genocide by supplying weapons to Georgia to incite military actions against the breakaway region.
“The United States, Ukraine and Israel bear a heavy responsibility for the genocide of the Ossetian people.” Kokoity said in a televised broadcast on Russia Today. “They are arming Georgia to the teeth and holding more military exercises.”
Russia routed Georgia’s U.S.-trained army in a war last August over South Ossetia and later recognized it as a sovereign country along with another breakaway region, Abkhazia. The defeat caused about $1 billion in damage to Georgia’s economy. No other country besides Russia and Nicaragua has recognized their independence.
“The myth of the genocide of South Ossetian people is made up in Russia and we aren’t going to pay any attention to Kokoity’s claims,” Temur Iakobashvili, Georgia’s reintegration minister, said by telephone today. Iakobashvili added that Kokoity has no “legal or moral’ right to speak for the breakaway region, as thousands of Russian soldiers in the region already outnumber South Ossetian civilians.
URL:

Russia urges to stop arms supply to Georgia-FM

06.08.2009,11.07

MOSCOW, August 6 (Itar-Tass) - Russia calls on the international community to stop supplies of any kind of arms to Georgia - not only offensive, but also all other military systems, RF Foreign Ministry spokesman Andrei Nesterenko said on the Vesti news television channel on Thursday in connection with the anniversary of tragic events in South Ossetia.

“It is difficult to overestimate the need for all countries to abstain for a long period from supplying to Georgia of offensive, and at best – of all kinds of weapons and military equipment,” the diplomat stressed.

Georgia denies claim of "aggressive rearming"

  • Russia: Georgian offensive would be "suicidal"
    * Georgia says security forces subject to EU monitoring
    * Saakashvili speaks to U.S. Vice President Biden
    * EU observers accused of allowing Georgia troop buildup
    (Adds Russian deputy minister, Kokoity comments)
    By Matt Robinson and Dmitry Solovyov
    TBILISI/MOSCOW, Aug 5 (Reuters) - Georgia on Wednesday dismissed as a "myth" Russian accusations that it was aggressively rearming and said it was in contact with ally Washington to defuse tensions over rebel South Ossetia.
    Russia crushed a Georgian assault on the breakaway territory in August last year, and tensions have grown ahead of Friday's first war anniversary, with accusations from both sides of gun and mortar fire on South Ossetia's border.
    Moscow on Wednesday again expressed concern that Georgia was rearming with Western help, but said it did not believe the former Soviet republic was capable of launching another offensive against South Ossetia.
    "As a military man, I will be forthright: if there is an (act of) aggression, there will be an adequate response," Anatoly Nogovitsyn, Russia's deputy chief of general staff, told a news conference after the army on Tuesday stepped up the combat readiness of troops in the rebel region.
    "Today we do not see any ability (of Georgia) to launch such aggression. And the political situation has radically changed. Not to understand this and continue acting according to the old schemes is just suicidal (for Georgia's leadership)."
    Russia controls the borders of South Ossetia and Georgia's other rebel Black Sea region of Abkhazia -- which Moscow recognised as independent states after last year's war -- and has kept more than 7,000 troops in both since the conflict.
    The five-day war, when Russia repelled the Georgian assault and sent tanks into Georgia proper, shook Western confidence in oil and gas routes running through the South Caucasus.
    Russia's assault last year worsened relations with Washington. But those tensions have since eased with meetings between President Barack Obama and his Russian counterpart Dmitry Medvedev, as well as attempts to make progress on a new nuclear arms treaty.
    Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin told a news conference in Moscow that U.S. attitudes were changing and urged Tbilisi to show caution.
    "Even U.S. Vice President Joe Biden ... categorically ruled out the use of force to resolve the problems in the Caucasus," he said, referring to Biden's Tbilisi visit last month.
    DIPLOMACY
    Washington says it has focused on improving the education and professional standards of Georgia's military, not on resupplying it with equipment lost in the 2008 war.
    Biden discussed the situation with Georgian leader Mikheil Saakashvili on Tuesday, after Presidents Obama and Medvedev spoke by phone. Georgian National Security Council secretary Eka Tkeshelashvili said Biden told him of Washington's "preventive diplomacy so the situation does not deteriorate".
    Tkeshelashvili told a news briefing Moscow was trying to create "a myth of Georgia's aggression and aggressive rearmament".
    Georgia is focused on rebuilding its "defensive capacities" in line with NATO standards, she said, and any Georgian military movements are monitored by 240 European Union observers.
    "Any military base, any police station, any movement of our military or even police forces at any time without prior notification can be monitored and can be observed and assessed by the (EU monitoring) mission," Tkeshelashvili said.
    South Ossetia's rebel leader Eduard Kokoity accused the EU observers on Wednesday of giving "tacit approval" to Georgia's military build-up along the tiny enclave's de facto borders with Georgia, Interfax quoted him as saying.
    Karasin called on Tbilisi to sign an agreement not to use force to resolve its conflicts in South Ossetia and another Georgian breakaway region Abkhazia on the Black Sea.
    Nogovitsyn said Georgia was trying to escalate tensions to win support from the West. "This is being done to present Russia as an enemy, and as long as there is an enemy, they ask for help and rearm. Here is the gist of the problem," he said. (Additional reporting by Amie Ferris-Rotman in Moscow; Editing by Charles Dick)

Russia vows to stop Georgia re-arming

  • Russia says to take steps against Georgia rearming
    * First anniversary of Georgia-Russia war approaching
    (Adds more comments from Karasin, background)
    MOSCOW, July 23 (Reuters) - Russia will take "concrete measures" to prevent Georgia from re-arming after its war with Moscow last year, ITAR-TASS news agency quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin as saying on Thursday.
    "We will continue to prevent the re-arming of (President Mikheil) Saakashvili's regime and will take concrete measures against this," the agency quoted Karasin as saying in an interview.
    Karasin made his comments as U.S. Vice-President Joe Biden visited Tbilisi in a show of support by Washington for its troubled South Caucasus ally ahead of the first anniversary in August of the Russia-Georgia war.
    Moscow is very sensitive to what it regards as U.S. meddling in its back yard, particularly as the war anniversary approaches. Washington wants to show that its recent efforts to improve relations with Russia do not come at the expense of its pro-Western allies in the former Soviet Union.
    "We have a deep worry regarding the activity of the Georgian leadership over remilitarising its country, which several states are responding to in a surprisingly calm and positive way" Karasin said, in comments directed at Tbilisi's allies.
    "In the event of foreign states supplying Georgia with arms and war equipment -- from Russia, or Soviet-developed, or produced by Russians or Soviets -- we will consider the question of limiting or stopping military-technical or military-economic development with these states", Tass quoted Karasin as saying.
    Karasin did not name any country but Moscow has previously expressed anger at Ukraine for selling weapons to Georgia which Russia says were used against it during the fighting.
    The Russian official also took aim at countries he said were concealing military aid under the guise of humanitarian programmes.
    "In recent months, we have observed efforts by some states to act in an underhand way to conceal military cooperation with the Georgian side, which includes masking it under the guise of 'humanitarian aid' to overcome the consequences of the conflict", Karasin said. (Reporting by Amie Ferris-Rotman; writing by Michael Stott; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Moscow Warns on Arming Georgia

24 July 2009By Nabi Abdullaev / The Moscow Times