Tuesday, 12 August 2008

Russia orders end to operation against Georgia

AFP
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2008

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev told defence chiefs on Tuesday he had decided to cease Russia’s military operation against Georgia.

“I have taken the decision to end the operation to force Georgian authorities into peace,” Medvedev said at a televised meeting.

“The purpose of the operation has been achieved…. The security of our peacekeeping forces and the civilian population has been restored,” he said at the meeting with Defence Minister Anatoly Serdyukov and the head of the military’s general staff, Nikolai Makarov.

“The aggressor has been punished and suffered significant losses,” he said.

Medvedev qualified the ending of hostilities, saying that in the event of new Georgian attacks in the rebel region of South Ossetia , such threats should be “liquidated.”

A senior Russian military commander also said that while a ceasefire by the forces and a halt in their advance into Georgia did not mean that all operations would be scrapped.

"If we have received the order to cease fire, this does not mean that we have stopped all actions, including reconnaissance," General Anatoly Nogovitsyn said at a briefing.

Medvedev's order was announced just as French President Nicolas Sarkozy arrived in Moscow for talks aimed at ending the conflict in Georgia, centred on South Ossetia.

France, which currently holds the European Union presidency, has pushed a three-point peace plan aimed at returning the situation in Georgia to what it was before hostilities broke out late last week.

Meanwhile on the ground, Georgian authorities said Russia's air force had again attempted to bomb a strategic oil pipeline, Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan, which connects the Caspian Sea to the Mediterranean via Georgia.

There was no immediate word on whether the pipeline had been damaged. Georgian authorities said Sunday that Russia had tried to hit the pipeline but missed, while Russia denied trying to target it.

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