Although you wouldn't know it from the US press, 
there's a big cloud over Saakashvili's
head, and it's getting bigger day by day, as all 
the world begins to doubt his version of events.

We have to spread the word about it, since 
McPalin--and Bush/Cheney--clearly want
to use the Georgian "cause" either to start a war 
with Russia, or to threaten it.

MCM

<http://www.spiegel.de/international/>http://www.spiegel.de/international/

<http://www.spiegel.de/>


SPIEGEL ONLINE
                        09/15/2008 12:00 AM




DID SAAKASHVILI LIE?

The West Begins to Doubt Georgian Leader

By SPIEGEL Staff

Five weeks after the war in the Caucasus the mood 
is shifting against Georgian President 
Saakashvili. Some Western intelligence reports 
have undermined Tbilisi's version of events, and 
there are now calls on both sides of the Atlantic 
for an independent investigation.


        Georgia's President Mikhail Saakashvili visits Gori last week.



Hillary Clinton looks tired. It is Tuesday of 
last week as she sits, exhausted, in the United 
States Senate. Even her outfit, a beige blazer 
over a black T-shirt, looks washed out.

Gone is the glamour of the Democratic Convention 
in Denver, where the party nominated Barack Obama 
as its presidential candidate, and gone is the 
dream of her own presidential candidacy in 2008. 
Instead, it's back to business as usual for 
Clinton. The Senate Armed Service Committee is in 
session, discussing the conflict between Russia 
and its tiny neighbor, Georgia.

Clinton speaks late in the debate. Even her voice 
sounds tired. But politically she is still her 
old self, and she cuts right to the chase.

"Did we embolden the Georgians in any way" to use 
military force? she asks the members of the 
committee. Did the Bush administration really 
warn Moscow and Georgia sufficiently about the 
consequences of a war? And how could it be that 
the United States was so taken by surprise by 
this outbreak of hostilities? These questions, 
says Clinton, should be examined by a US 
commission, which should "in the first place 
determine the actual facts."

Although Clinton speaks for only a few minutes, 
her words show that the mood toward Georgia is 
shifting in the United States.

For Americans, wasn't this war in the faraway 
Caucasus -- over there in the Old World -- 
nothing but a struggle between a giant, 
expansionist country and a small, democratic 
nation it was seeking to subjugate? And wasn't 
Georgia attacked merely "because we want to be 
free," as President Mikhail Saakashvili was 
saying in front of CNN's cameras almost hourly?

"Today, we are all Georgians," Republican 
presidential candidate John McCain declared. The 
neoconservative commentator Robert Kagan compared 
the Russian action with the Nazis' 1938 invasion 
of the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia. And 
in a meeting with US Vice President Richard 
Cheney, Saakashvili was assured of Washington's 
support for his most fervent wish: admission to 
NATO.

But now, five weeks after the end of the war in 
the Caucasus, the winds have shifted in America. 
Even Washington is beginning to suspect that 
Saakashvili, a friend and ally, could in fact be 
a gambler -- someone who triggered the bloody 
five-day war and then told the West bold-faced 
lies. "The concerns about Russia have remained," 
says Paul Sanders, an expert on Russia and the 
director of the conservative Nixon Center in 
Washington. His words reflect the continuing 
Western assessment that Russia's military act of 
revenge against the tiny Caucasus nation Georgia 
was disproportionate, that Moscow violated 
international law by recognizing the separatist 
republics of South Ossetia and Abkhazia and, 
finally, that it used Georgia as a vehicle to 
showcase its imperial renaissance.

But then Saunders qualifies his statement: "More 
and more people are realizing that there are two 
sides in this conflict, and that Georgia was not 
as much a victim as a willing participant." 
Members of US President George W. Bush's 
administration, too, are reconsidering their 
position. Georgia "marched into the South 
Ossetian capital" after a series of provocations, 
says Assistant Secretary of State for European 
and Eurasian Affairs Daniel Fried.

Does this suggest that America's pronouncements 
of solidarity with Saakashvili were just as 
premature as those of the Europeans? British 
Prime Minister Gordon Brown had called for a 
"radical" review of relations with Moscow, 
Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt decried what 
he called a violation of international law, and 
German Chancellor Angela Merkel promised Georgia 
that, at some point, it would "become a member of 
NATO, if it so wishes."

But now the volume is being turned down on the 
anti-Moscow rhetoric. Last week German Foreign 
Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier publicly called 
for clarification on the question of who is to 
blame for the Caucasus war. "We do need to know 
more about who bears what portion of the 
responsibility for the military escalation and to 
what extent," Steinmeier told a meeting of 
Germany's more than 200 ambassadors in Berlin. 
The European Union, he said, must now "define our 
relations with the parties to the conflict for 
the medium and long term," and that the time has 
come to have concrete information.

Which Side Launched the First Strikes?

Much depends on the clarification of this 
question of blame. After this war, the West must 
ask itself whether it truly wants to accept a 
country like Georgia into NATO, especially if 
this means having to intervene militarily in the 
Caucasus if a similar conflict arises. And what 
sort of partnership should it seek in the future 
with Russia, which, for the first time, has now 
become as insistent as the United States on 
protecting its spheres of influence?

The attempt to reconstruct the five-day war in 
August continues to revolve around one key 
question: Which side was the first to launch 
military strikes? Information coming from NATO 
and the Organization for Security and Cooperation 
in Europe (OSCE) now paints a different picture 
than the one that prevailed during the first days 
of the battle for the South Ossetian capital 
Tskhinvali -- and is fueling the doubts of 
Western politicians.



AFP


Georgian troops fire rockets at South Ossetian separatist troops on Aug. 8.



The Georgian government continues to maintain 
that the war began on Thursday, Aug. 7, at 11:30 
p.m. According to its account, it was at this 
time that it received several intelligence 
reports that approximately 150 Russian army 
vehicles had entered Georgian territory, in the 
separatist republic of South Ossetia, through the 
Roki Tunnel, which passes under the main Caucasus 
ridge. Their objective, say the Georgians, was 
Tskhinvali, and additional military columns 
followed beginning at 3 a.m.

"We wanted to stop the Russian troops before they 
could reach Georgian villages," Saakashvili told 
SPIEGEL recently, explaining the marching orders 
that were given to his army. "When our tanks 
moved toward Tskhinvali, the Russians bombed the 
city. They were the ones -- not us -- who reduced 
Tskhinvali to rubble." But reports by the OSCE 
describe a different situation in those critical 
hours.

The OSCE maintains a mission in South Ossetia, 
which was caught between the fronts when the war 
erupted. According to a so-called spot report 
that OSCE officials wrote at 11 a.m. Georgian 
time on Aug. 8: "Shortly before midnight, central 
Tskhinvali came under heavy fire and shelling, 
with some of it presumably coming from launching 
pads and artillery stationed outside the conflict 
zone. The Tskhinvali office of the mission was 
hit, and the three remaining international 
employees sought shelter in the basement."

Spot reports are sent regularly to the Vienna 
offices of the 56 OSCE member states. The Aug. 8 
report is kept neutral, a reflection of the fact 
that both Georgia and Russia are members of the 
organization, so that the information it contains 
is initially absent of any value judgments. 
Instead, it merely identifies where the Russians 
violated Georgian airspace or where the Georgians 
occupied South Ossetian villages, for example.

As SPIEGEL has learned, NATO had already hazarded 
a far more definitive conclusion at the time. Its 
International Military Staff (IMS), which does 
the preparatory work for the Military Committee, 
the highest-ranking military body in the 
alliance, quickly evaluated the existing 
material. The Military Committee includes 
officers from all 26 member states.

At noon on Aug. 8, the NATO experts could not 
have deduced the full scope of the Russian 
advance, which Saakashvili later described as an 
attack, while Moscow called it an operation to 
"secure the peace." Nevertheless, they were 
already issuing internal warnings that, in light 
of initial Russian attacks with warplanes and 
short-range missiles, Moscow was not expected to 
remain passive.

Georgia's Calculated Offensive

One thing was already clear to the officers at 
NATO headquarters in Brussels: They thought that 
the Georgians had started the conflict and that 
their actions were more calculated than pure 
self-defense or a response to Russian 
provocation. In fact, the NATO officers believed 
that the Georgian attack was a calculated 
offensive against South Ossetian positions to 
create the facts on the ground, and they coolly 
treated the exchanges of fire in the preceding 
days as minor events. Even more clearly, NATO 
officials believed, looking back, that by no 
means could these skirmishes be seen as 
justification for Georgian war preparations.



DPA


Russian soldiers in South Ossetia, Aug. 10.



The NATO experts did not question the Georgian 
claim that the Russians had provoked them by 
sending their troops through the Roki Tunnel. But 
their evaluation of the facts was dominated by 
skepticism that these were the true reasons for 
Saakashvili's actions.

The details that Western intelligence agencies 
extracted from their signal intelligence agree 
with NATO's assessments. According to this 
intelligence information, the Georgians amassed 
roughly 12,000 troops on the border with South 
Ossetia on the morning of Aug. 7. Seventy-five 
tanks and armored personnel carriers -- a third 
of the Georgian military's arsenal -- were 
assembled near Gori. Saakashvili's plan, 
apparently, was to advance to the Roki Tunnel in 
a 15-hour blitzkrieg and close the eye of the 
needle between the northern and southern Caucasus 
regions, effectively cutting off South Ossetia 
from Russia.

At 10:35 p.m. on Aug. 7, less than an hour before 
Russian tanks entered the Roki Tunnel, according 
to Saakashvili, Georgian forces began their 
artillery assault on Tskhinvali. The Georgians 
used 27 rocket launchers, including 
152-millimeter guns, as well as cluster bombs. 
Three brigades began the nighttime assault.

The intelligence agencies were monitoring the 
Russian calls for help on the airwaves. The 58th 
Army, part of which was stationed in North 
Ossetia, was apparently not ready for combat, at 
least not during that first night.

The Georgian army, on the other hand, consisted 
primarily of infantry groups, which were forced 
to travel along major roads. It soon became 
bogged down and was unable to move past 
Tskhinvali. Western intelligence learned that the 
Georgians were experiencing "handling problems" 
with their weapons. The implication was that the 
Georgians were not fighting well.

The intelligence agencies conclude that the 
Russian army did not begin firing until 7:30 a.m. 
on Aug. 8, when it launched an SS-21 short-range 
ballistic missile on the city of Borzhomi, 
southwest of Gori. The missile apparently hit 
military and government bunker positions. Russian 
warplanes began their first attacks on the 
Georgian army a short time later. Suddenly the 
airwaves came to life, as did the Russian army.

Russian troops from North Ossetia did not begin 
marching through the Roki Tunnel until roughly 11 
a.m. This sequence of events is now seen as 
evidence that Moscow did not act offensively, but 
merely reacted. Additional SS-21s were later 
moved to the south. The Russians deployed 5,500 
troops to Gori and 7,000 to the border between 
Georgia and its second separatist region, 
Abkhazia.

Calls in Europe for International Investigation

Wolfgang Richter, a colonel with Germany's 
General Staff and a senior military advisor to 
the German OSCE mission, is another expert on the 
situation. Richter, who was in Tbilisi at the 
time, confirms that the Georgians had already 
amassed troops on the border with South Ossetia 
in July. In a closed-door session in Berlin last 
Wednesday, he told German Defense Minister 
Franz-Josef Jung and the leading members of the 
foreign and defense committees in the German 
parliament that the Georgians had, to some 
extent, "lied" about troop movements. Richter 
said that he could find no evidence to support 
Saakashvili's claims that the Russians had 
marched into the Roki Tunnel before Tbilisi gave 
its orders to attack, but that he could not rule 
them out. For some members of parliament, his 
statements sounded like an endorsement of the 
Russian interpretation. "He left no room for 
interpretation," one of the committee members 
concluded. "It is clear that there was more 
responsibility on the Georgian than the Russian 
side," another committee member said.

On the strength of all these reports, it was 
clear to Western observers who had ignited the 
South Ossetian powder keg. In the heat of battle, 
the analysts understandably did not take into 
account the background to the conflict, which 
includes years of Russian provocation of Tbilisi.



DER SPIEGEL


South Ossetia



But now it is high time for the European Union to 
address the reasons behind the war. Moscow has 
been baffled by the Europeans' refusal to condemn 
Saakashvili's assault on Tskhinvali and the 
insistence on pointing the finger at Russia 
instead. The Europeans, a diplomat with the 
Russian Foreign Ministry complained, apparently 
lack the "courage to stand up to Washington and 
its allies in Tbilisi."

At an informal meeting in the southern French 
city of Avignon two weekends ago, Europe's 
foreign ministers called for "an international 
investigation" into the conflict. The logic of 
that decision was that anyone who hopes to 
mediate should not be biased in evaluating what 
happened in the Caucasus. Apparently even the 
foreign ministers of Great Britain, Sweden, the 
Baltic States and other Eastern European 
countries agreed. Before the Avignon meeting, 
they had advocated a tough stance toward Moscow 
and more solidarity with Tbilisi -- irrespective 
of the facts.

The 27 foreign ministers plan to adopt a formal 
resolution at the beginning of this week calling 
for an investigation. But the question of who 
would be in charge of such a delicate mission 
remains completely unanswered: the United 
Nations, the OSCE, non-governmental 
organizations, academics -- or a combination of 
all of these groups? Only one thing is clear: The 
EU itself has no intention of taking on the 
issue. Europeans fear that this would only widen 
the gap between hardliners and those advocating 
cautious reconciliation with Moscow.

Saakashvili, the choleric ruler of Tbilisi, is 
following the shift in opinions in the West with 
growing unease. He reiterates his version of the 
attack on Georgia in daily television 
appearances, an international PR firm is 
constantly inundating the Western media with 
carefully selected material, and Tbilisi is 
already taking its case to the International War 
Crimes Tribunal in The Hague, where it accuses 
the Russians of "ethnic cleansing."

But Saakashvili is no longer as confident in his 
allies' support. Ahead of NATO Secretary General 
Jaap de Hoop Scheffer's visit to Tbilisi this 
week, Saakashvili called upon the Western 
alliance to show its resolve, noting that a 
display of weakness toward Moscow would lead to 
"a never-ending story of Russian aggression."

Is Saakashvili Already Dead Politically?

The Georgian president is also coming under 
pressure in his own country, as the united front 
that developed during the Russian invasion 
crumbles. Those who have long criticized 
Saakashvili and his senior staff as an 
"authoritarian regime" are speaking out once 
again. Back in December 2007, Georgy Khaindrava, 
a former minister for conflict resolution who was 
dismissed in 2006, told SPIEGEL that Saakashvili 
and his circle are people "for whom power is 
everything." A few weeks earlier, Saakashvili had 
deployed special police forces in Tbilisi, where 
the opposition had staged large demonstrations, 
and declared a state of emergency. At the time, 
Khaindrava expressed concerns that Saakashvili 
could soon attempt to bolster his weakened image 
with a "small, victorious war" -- against South 
Ossetia.

In May 2006, former Foreign Minister Salomé 
Surabishvili had already cautioned against her 
former boss's actions. The "enormous arms 
buildup" he had engaged in made "no sense," 
Surabishvili said, adding that it created the 
impression that he planned to resolve the 
conflicts in Abkhazia and South Ossetia 
militarily.

Last week, the heads of Georgia's two major 
political parties called for Saakashvili's 
resignation and the establishment of a 
"government that is neither pro-Russian nor 
pro-American, but pro-Georgian." In Moscow, 
former Georgian Deputy Interior Minister Temur 
Khachishzili, who spent years in prison for 
attempting to assassinate Saakashvili's 
predecessor, Eduard Shevardnadze, is drumming up 
support for a change of government back home 
among the more than one million Georgians living 
in Russia.

Is Saakashvili, who only five weeks ago had 
gained the West's sympathy as the victim of a 
Russian invasion, already dead politically? Last 
week he received support from an unexpected 
source, the Red Star, a newspaper published by 
the Russian Defense Ministry. The paper published 
remarks by an officer of the 58th Army, which 
Moscow has since denied. Nevertheless, the 
officer, ironically enough, fueled doubts as to 
the conclusion, by Western intelligence agencies 
and NATO, that Russian army units had not reached 
Tskhinvali until Aug. 9.

In the Red Star account, Captain Denis Sidristy, 
the commander of a company of the 135th Motorized 
Infantry Regiment, describes how he and his unit 
were already in the Roki Tunnel, on their way to 
Tskhinvali, in the night preceding Aug. 8. Did 
Moscow's invasion begin earlier than the Russians 
have admitted, after all?

Last week, Moscow investigators also conceded, 
for the first time, that the number of civilian 
casualties of the Georgian assault on Tskhinvali 
was not 2,000, as Russian officials have 
repeatedly claimed, but 134.

When asked about the account in the Red Star, a 
spokesman for the Russian Defense Ministry told 
SPIEGEL that it was the result of a technical 
error. Moreover, the spokesman said, the official 
in question had been wounded and therefore "could 
no longer remember the situation clearly."

Last Friday Captain Sidristy, since decorated 
with the Russian defense ministry's order of 
bravery, was given a second opportunity to 
describe his version of the events to the Red 
Star. His unit, he said in his revised version, 
had advanced on Tskhinvali somewhat later than he 
had told the paper the first time.

As it appears, it is still difficult to separate 
truth and lies about the brief war in the 
Caucasus.

RALF BESTE, UWE KLUSSMANN, CORDULA MEYER, 
CHRISTIAN NEEF, MATTHIAS SCHEEP, HANS-JÜRGEN 
SCHLAMP, HOLGER STARK

Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan



--
Richard Tamm
1015 Shattuck Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94707
510-524-4608
_____________________________________
Restore the Republic. Dismantle the Empire.
"All great truths begin as blasphemy." - George Bernard Shaw
"In a time of universal deceit, truth-telling 
becomes a revolutionary act." - George Orwell
"The greatest homage we can pay to truth is to use it." - Ralph Waldo Emerson
"When fascism comes to America , it will be 
wrapped in a flag and carrying a cross." - 
Sinclair Lewis, 1935
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