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2008 South Ossetia war
Part of Georgian–Ossetian conflict
and Georgian–Abkhazian conflict
File:2008 South Ossetia war.svg
Location of Georgia (including Abkhazia and South Ossetia) and the Russian part of North Caucasus
Date7 August 200816 August (Preliminary ceasefire); or 12 August 2008 (Medvedev's order to end the operation)
LocationGeorgia
Result Russian victory
Russian recognition of South Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent republics.
Territorial
changes
Georgia loses control over parts of Abkhazia and S. Ossetia it previously held.
Belligerents
Russia Russian Federation
South Ossetia South Ossetia
Abkhazia Abkhazia
Georgia (country) Georgia
Commanders and leaders
Russia Dmitry Medvedev
Russia Anatoly Khrulyov
Russia Vladimir Shamanov
Russia Marat Kulakhmetov
Russia Vyacheslav Borisov
Russia Sulim Yamadayev
South Ossetia Eduard Kokoity
Abkhazia Sergei Bagapsh
Georgia (country) Mikheil Saakashvili
Georgia (country) Davit Kezerashvili
Georgia (country) Vano Merabishvili
Georgia (country) Zaza Gogava
Georgia (country) Mamuka Kurashvili
Georgia (country) Mamuka Balakhadze
Strength
Russia Est. at least 15,000 regulars in Georgia (as of 13/07/08), not including support and rear troops (in Russia and on the sea)
South Ossetia 3,000 regulars and 15,000 reservists; unknown number of volunteers
Abkhazia 5,000 not including reservists; unknown number of volunteers
At least 23,000 total
Georgia (country) Est. 12,000 troops including 75 tanks and armored personnel carriers;
Total military personnel is 37,000 as of 2007 Reserves number up to 250,000.
Unknown number of Georgian Police deployed in the conflict zone
Casualties and losses
Confirmed by Russia:
South Ossetia Unknown number of killed and 41 captured
Russia 71 killed, 341 wounded, and 6 captured
Confirmed by Abkhazia:
Abkhazia 1 killed, 2 wounded
Confirmed by Georgia:
135 soldiers killed, 34 missing, 42 captured and 1,964 wounded;
14 policemen killed and 22 missing

Civilian casualties:
Georgia: Officials claimed at least 188 Georgian civilians killed and 912 missing; One foreign civilian killed and 3 wounded
South Ossetia: Russia and South Ossetian officials claim 1,492 South Ossetian civilians killed/missing (365 confirmed by September 25) HRW and Memorial claim up to 100 killed. Russian Prosecutor's Office Committee is investigating 154 deaths.


Refugees:
Georgia: At least 158,000 civilians displaced (including 56,000 from Gori, Georgia and 15,000 South Ossetian Georgians per UNHCR). Estimate by Georgian Coordinator for Humanitarian Affairs: at least 230,000.
South Ossetia: Displaced from South Ossetia to Russia: Russian estimate, 30,000; HRW estimate, 24,000.
Russo-Georgian War
South Ossetia

Abkhazia

Georgia

Uncontested Georgia

Post-Soviet conflicts
Caucasus

Central Asia

Eastern Europe
Georgian–Ossetian conflict

The 2008 South Ossetia War was a land, air and sea war fought between Georgia on one side, and Russia, militaries from South Ossetia and Abkhazia, Russian and other paramilitaries on the other. A civil war fought after the breakup of the Soviet Union left parts of South Ossetia in control of an unrecognised separatist government backed by Russia. Other parts remained in control of Georgia.

Hostilities escalated during June and July 2008. On the evening of 7 August2008 Georgia launched a ground and air based military attack against South Ossetia's capital Tskhinvali. Russia responded by sending reinforcements into South Ossetia and launching bombing raids further into Georgia. The events during 7 August remain a matter of debates and controversy. One day later Russian and Abkhazian forces opened a second front by attacking the Kodori Gorge, held by Georgia, and invaded western parts of Georgia's interior. Russian naval forces blocked Georgia's coast. Almost all Georgian naval units were set on fire or sunk by Russian forces at Poti naval pier on 13 August.

After five days of heavy fighting, Georgian forces were ejected from South Ossetia and Russian troops invaded Georgia proper occupying cities of Poti and Gori among others..

Following mediation by EU chairman, French president Nicolas Sarkozy, a preliminary ceasefire agreement was reached on 12 August, and was signed by Georgia and Russia on 15 August in Tiblisi and 16 August in Moscow. On 12 August, president Medvedev had already ordered a halt to Russian military operations in Georgia but fighting did not stop immediately.

When the ceasefire was signed Russia pulled most of its troops out from the Georgia proper. However, Russia established so-called "buffer zones" around Abkhazia and South Ossetia and check points in Georgia's interior (Poti, Senaki). International monitoring was deployed in Georgia on 1 October. Following international agreements, Russia completed its withdrawal on 8 October, 2008. Russian troops remain in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, including areas under Georgian control before the war .

Background

Main article: Background of the 2008 South Ossetia war See also: Georgian-Ossetian conflict; South Ossetian independence referendum, 2006; and 2008 Georgia-Russia crisis
Ethnic map of the Caucasus from 1995: Ossetians live in North and South Ossetia, as well as in central Georgia.

The Ossetians are an Iranian people whose ethnogenesis lies along the Don River. They came to the Caucasus after being driven out of their homeland in the Mongol invasions of the 13th century. Most clans settled in the territories today known as North Ossetia-Alania (currently part of Russia) and South Ossetia (currently part of Georgia).

In 1990, as the USSR was nearing its collapse, the longtime anti-Soviet dissident Zviad Gamsakhurdia was emerging as Georgia's first independent leader. In basing his campaign for the presidency on a nationalist platform he projected ethnic Georgians, who at the time constituted 70% of the population, as the country's true patriots, to the debasement of South Ossetians as newcomers.

In late 1994, Georgia's Supreme Council ruled that the South-Ossetian autonomous region (oblast) be disbanded. The government in Tbilisi established Georgian as the country's principal language, whereas the Ossetians' first two languages were Russian and Ossetian.

Amidst rising ethnic tensions, a quasi-military conflict broke out in January 1991 when Georgian forces entered Tskhinvali; more than 2,000 people are believed to have been killed. The war resulted in South Ossetia, which has a Georgian ethnic minority of around one fifth of the total population (70,000), breaking away from Georgia and gaining de facto independence. After a cease-fire in 1992, Tskhinvali was isolated from the Georgian territory around it, and accounts of atrocities against Ossetians — rapes and grisly killings — circulated endlessly. Russian, Georgian and South Ossetian peacekeepers were stationed in South Ossetia under the JCC's mandate of demilitarization. The 1992 ceasefire also defined both a zone of conflict around the South Ossetian capital of Tskhinvali and a security corridor along the border of South Ossetian territories.

In the 2006 South Ossetian independence referendum, full independence was supported by 99% of voters, although ethnic Georgians living in the region did not participate. Georgia accused Russia of the annexation of its internationally recognised territory and installing a puppet government led by Eduard Kokoity and several officials who previously served in the Russian FSB and Army. Restoring South Ossetia and Abkhazia (a region with a similar movement) to Georgian control has been a goal of Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili since the Rose Revolution.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev stated that he would "protect the life and dignity of Russian citizens wherever they are". The BBC and other sources confirm that Russia has issued "most citizens" with passports, "potentially justifying direct intervention". Reuters describes the government as "dependent on Russia, two thirds of annual budget", and reports that "Russia's state-controlled gas giant Gazprom is building new gas pipelines and infrastructure" worth hundreds of millions of dollars to supply its cities with energy.

In mid-April, 2008, the Russian Foreign Ministry announced that Prime Minister Putin had given instructions to the federal government whereby Moscow would pursue economic, diplomatic, and administrative relations with Abkhazia and South Ossetia as with the subjects of Russia. In April 2008, Georgia accused Russia of shooting down a Georgian spy plane flying over Abkhazia. Russia denied involvement. Also Georgian interior ministry officials showed the BBC video footage of Russian troops deploying heavy military hardware in the breakaway region of Abkhazia and said that "it proved the Russians were a fighting force, not just peacekeepers." All this was denied by Russia.

Georgia has released intercepted telephone calls purporting to show that part of a Russian armored regiment crossed into the separatist enclave of South Ossetia nearly a full day before Georgia’s attack on the capital, Tskhinvali, late on Aug. 7; Russian military played down the significance of the intercepted conversations, saying troop movements to the enclave before the war erupted were part of the normal rotation and replenishment of longstanding peacekeeping forces there. But at a minimum, the intercepted calls, which senior American officials have reviewed and described as credible if not conclusive, suggest there were Russian military movements earlier than had previously been acknowledged, whether routine or hostile, into Georgian territory as tensions accelerated toward war.

Timeline of events

Main article: Timeline of the 2008 South Ossetia war See also: Battle of Tskhinvali and Battle of the Kodori Valley

Events prior to August 2008 are described in Georgian–Ossetian conflict.

  • August 1 - At 8:05 am two roadside bombs hit a Georgian police vehicle on a detour road connecting Georgian-populated villages near the South Ossetian capital of Tskhinvali. The five occupants were wounded (six according to the secondary sources ). Late in the evening, intense fighting began between Georgian troops and the forces of South Ossetia. Georgia claimed that South Ossetian separatists had shelled Georgian villages in violation of a ceasefire. South Ossetia denied provoking the conflict. A South Ossetian militiaman was killed by sniper located in a Georgian police post. The Russian peacekeeping command reported that snipers killed at least three people in Tskhinvali around 9pm. The command also reported that Tskhinvali came under mortar fire from the Georgian villages of Ergneti and Zemo Nikozi.
  • August 2 - The South Ossetian side said that shelling and shooting resumed overnight. Mamuka Kurashvili, a Georgian Defense Ministry official in charge of overseeing peacekeeping operations, said that the Georgian side had opened fire in response to shelling of Georgian villages. Six civilians and one Georgian policeman were injured as a result of shelling of the Georgian villages of Zemo Nikozi, Kvemo Nikozi, Nuli and Ergneti, the Georgian Interior Ministry said. South Ossetian side said that six people were killed and about 15 injured as a result of intense shooting by the Georgian side directed towards Tskhinvali and nearby Ossetian villages late on August 1 and overnight on August 2.
    The Russian military exercise Caucasus Frontier 2008, held almost concurrently with the joint US-Georgian Immediate Response 2008 exercise, ends after roughly one month of operations.
Russo-Georgian War
Main topics
Related topics
Georgia (country) Abkhazia South Ossetia Russia
  • August 5 - Russian ambassador-at-large Yuri Popov warned that Russia would intervene in the event of military conflict. Dmitry Medoyev declared from Moscow that volunteers were already arriving, primarily "from North Ossetia", in the Republic of South Ossetia to offer help in the event of Georgian aggression.
  • August 6 - South Ossetia and Georgia didn't agree on the format of talks. South Ossetian side had proposed holding a JCC session with the participation of Georgian, South Ossetian, Russian and Russia’s North Ossetian negotiators in Tskhinvali on August 9. Tbilisi has consistently refused to participate in the quadripartite JCC talks.
    According to the eyewitness account of Nezavisimaya gazeta correspondent, on August 6, sporadic heavy shelling of Tskhinvali by Georgian military starts. The weapons used by Georgians, the eyewitness says, are mortars, artillery and sniper rifles. South Ossetian military officials speculate that the Georgian army is preparing for a full-scale attack on the city. Russian correspondent reports that the city was under artillery and mortar fire that continued all night long. Russian army at North Ossetia draws up some troops closer to Georgian border.
  • August 7 - Around 2 p.m. that day, Ossetian artillery fire resumed, targeting Georgian positions in the village of Avnevi in South Ossetia. The barrage continued for several hours. Two Georgian peacekeepers were killed, the first deaths among Georgians in South Ossetia since the 1990s, according to Georgian Prime Minister Lado Gurgenidze. President Mikheil Saakashvili ordered Georgian troops to cease fire after occupying several important heights around the city. According to Georgian military, despite the declared ceasefire, fighting intensified.South Ossetia denies any such late-night bombardment. OSCE monitors in Tskhinvali also did not record any outgoing heavy artillery fire from the South Ossetian side at that time, according to a Western diplomat with access to the organization's on-the-ground reporting. Hours after the declaration of the ceasefire, in a televised address, Mikheil Saakashvili vowed to restore Tbilisi's control by force over what he called the "criminal regime" in South Ossetia and Abkhazia and "reinforce order". At 10:35 p.m. on Aug. 7 Georgian forces began an artillery assault on Tskhinvali. The Georgians used 27 rocket launchers, including 152-millimeter guns. Three brigades began the nighttime assault.
    The events during August 7 remain a matter of debates and controversy . According to Georgian intelligence and several Russian sources, parts of 58th Russian Army moved to the Georgian territory through the Roki Tunnel before the Georgian attack on Tskhinvali . Western intelligence sources do not support the Georgian claim .
  • August 8 - Early in the morning, Georgia launched a military offensive to surround and capture Tskhinvali, breaking the terms of the 1992 ceasefire and crossing into the security zone established therein. According to a Russian military official, over ten Russian Peacekeeping force servicemen stationed in Tskhinvali were killed during the attack. The heavy shelling, which included Georgian rockets being fired into South Ossetia left parts of the capital city in ruins, which Russian government sources claimed amounted to genocide. The news of the shelling was extensively covered by Russian media prior to the military reaction that followed, as Russia claimed to have responded in defense of South Ossetians against what they called "a genocide by Georgian forces." Russia claimed civilian casualties may amount up to 2,000 dead in Tskhinvali following the Georgian shelling. The extent of civilian casualties was later disputed in a number of sources, with Human Rights Watch report speaking of only 44 dead in Tskhinvali's city hospital, leveled with the BM-21 "Grad" multiple missile systems during the shelling of the city. The Tskhinvali hospital, HRW reports, was under constant shelling for 18 hours. Later president Saakashvili countered with allegations that the Russians had deployed tanks into the disputed region before he gave the order for Georgian forces to attack,. At Russia’s request, the United Nations Security Council held consultations on 7 August at 11pm (US EST time), followed by an open meeting at 1.15am (US EST time) on 8 August, with Georgia attending. During consultations, Council members discussed a press statement that called for an end to hostilities. They were unable, however, to come to a consensus. In the morning, Georgia announced that it had surrounded the city and captured eight South Ossetian villages. An independent Georgian television station announced that Georgian military took control of the city.
    Russia sent troops across the Georgian border, into South Ossetia.
Tskhinvali after the battle
  • August 9 - An action in the Black Sea off Abkhazia resulted in a Georgian missile boat being sunk by the Russian Navy. The Russians claimed that Georgian ships had violated the security zone of the Black Sea Fleet and therefore the action was in accordance with international law. Following the skirmish, the remaining Georgian ships withdrew to a nearby harbor.
    A second front was opened by the military of the Republic of Abkhazia in the Kodori Valley, the only region of Abkhazia that was, before the war began, still in effective control of Georgian loyalists.
    Most international observers began calling for a peaceful solution to the conflict. The European Union and the United States expressed a willingness to send a joint delegation to try and negotiate a ceasefire.
  • August 11 - Russia ruled out peace talks with Georgia until the latter withdrew from South Ossetia and signed a legally binding pact renouncing the use of force against South Ossetia and Abkhazia.
    On that night, Russian paratroopers deployed in Abkhazia carried out raids deep inside Georgian territory to destroy military bases from where Georgia could send reinforcements to its troops sealed off in South Ossetia. Russian forces reached the military base near the town of Senaki outside Abkhazia on the 11th, leaving the base there destroyed. Gori was shelled and bombed by the Russians as the Georgian military and most of residents of the Gori District fled.
Burned Georgian tank in Tskhinvali
File:Gori august2008 05.jpg
Destroyed civilian apartment building in Gori, Georgia which according to Human Rights Watch was bombed by the Russian aircraft using cluster bombs
  • August 12 - Russian President Medvedev said that he had ordered an end to military operations in Georgia. Later on the same day, Russian president Medvedev approved a six-point peace plan brokered by President-in-Office of the European Union, Nicolas Sarkozy, in Moscow; both sides were to sign it by the 17th.
    Russian troops drove through the port of Poti, and took up positions around it.
  • August 13 - All of the remaining Georgian forces, including at least 1,500 civilians in the Kodori Valley, had retreated from Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
    Russian tanks were seen at Gori. Russian troops were seen on the road from Gori to Tbilisi, but turned off to the north, about an hour from Tbilisi, and encamped. Georgian troops occupied the road six miles (about 10 km) closer to Tbilisi.
  • August 14 - Efforts to institute joint patrols of Georgian and Russian police in Gori broke down due to apparent discord among personnel.
  • August 15 - Reuters stated that Russian forces had pushed to 34 miles (55 km) from Tbilisi, the closest during the war; they stopped in Igoeti 41°59′22″N 44°25′04″E / 41.98944°N 44.41778°E / 41.98944; 44.41778, an important crossroads. According to the report, 17 APCs and 200 soldiers, including snipers, participated in the advance; the convoy included a military ambulance, and initially three helicopters provided covering fire. That day, United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice also traveled to Tbilisi, where Saakashvili signed the 6-point peace plan in her presence.
Pictures on display outside the Georgian parliament showing the destruction after Russian bombings in Gori.
  • August 16 - The Russians occupied Poti, a sea port outside the conflict region, as well as military bases in Gori and Senaki.
  • August 17 - The BBC's Richard Galpin, who had spent the previous two days travelling from the Black Sea port of Poti to Tbilisi, said that Georgian forces seem to be surrendering control of the highway to the Russians. According to BBC's Gabriel Gatehouse, there is a "much-reduced" Russian military presence in Gori and lorries can be seen delivering humanitarian aid. But he says Russian soldiers still control the town's key entry and exit points.
    Referring to a major ground exercise Russia held in July, just north of Georgia’s border, Dale Herspring (an expert on Russian military affairs at Kansas State University) described Russia's intervention as being "exactly what they executed in Georgia just a few weeks later... a complete dress rehearsal".
  • August 19 - The Russian forces in Poti took prisoner 21 Georgian troops who had approached the city. They were taken to a Russian base at Senaki; there is dispute whether they were later released.
    On the same day, Russian and Georgian forces exchanged prisoners of war. Georgia said it handed over 5 Russian servicemen, in exchange for 15 Georgians, including two civilians.
  • August 22 - At least 40 Russian armoured personnel carriers left Gori; other Russian troops remained in the outskirts of Poti with a checkpoint manned by 20 men on the main road, and a Reuters reporter observed a checkpoint in Karaleti, 6 km north of Gori. At a news conference held in the afternoon, Col. Gen. Anatoly Nogovitsyn insisted "These patrols were envisaged in the international agreement, Poti is outside of the security zone, but that does not mean we will sit behind a fence watching them riding around in Hummers."
  • August 23 - Russia declared the withdrawal of its forces to lines it asserted fulfilled the six points: into Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and the "security corridor" around South Ossetia. The bulk of its forces left Georgian soil altogether; yet, checkpoint installations remained on the main road from Tbilisi to Poti where it passed within 8 kilometers of South Ossetia; two Russian outposts remained outside Poti.
  • August 26 through August 29 - The United Nations' UNOSAT program published a series of satellite images which showed the extent of the Georgian bombardment of the civilian targets with a disclaimer that this is an initial damage assessment and has not yet been independently validated on the ground. Later, Human Rights Watch (HRW) used the images to support the claim that widespread torching of ethnic Georgian villages had occurred inside South Ossetia.

Six-point peace plan

On 12 August Russian President Medvedev met the President-in-Office of the European Union, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, and approved a six-point peace plan. Late that night Georgian President Saakashvili agreed to the text. Sarkozy's plan originally had just the first four points. Russia added the fifth and sixth points. Georgia asked for the additions in parentheses, but Russia rejected them, and Sarkozy convinced Georgia to agree to the unchanged text. On 14 August South Ossetia President Eduard Kokoity and Abkhazia President Sergei Bagapsh signed the peace plan as well.

1. No recourse to the use of force.

2. Definitive cessation of hostilities.

3. Free access to humanitarian aid (addition rejected: and to allow the return of refugees).

4. The Armed Forces of Georgia must withdraw to their permanent positions.

5. The Armed Forces of the Russian Federation must withdraw to the line where they were stationed prior to the beginning of hostilities. Prior to the establishment of international mechanisms the Russian peacekeeping forces will take additional security measures. (addition rejected: six months)

6. An international debate on the future status of South Ossetia and Abkhazia and ways to ensure their lasting security will take place. (addition rejected: based on the decisions of the UN and the OSCE).

The Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe has 200 personnel in the area, of which nine are military observers. OSCE is preparing to send 100 more observers to monitor the ceasefire, of which 20 are to be deployed immediately. On 18 August, Russia also initially opposed the deployment of 100 new observers into the region, but later accepted them.

After the cease fire had been signed, hostilities did not immediately stop. A reporter for the UK The Guardian was quoted on the 13th of August saying "the idea there is a ceasefire is ridiculous" while Russian troops and irregulars advanced.

Russian withdrawal

Despite numerous calls for a quick withdrawal from Georgia by western leaders Russian troops did occupy some parts of Georgia proper for about 2 months. Withdrawal from the so called "buffer zones" around South Ossetia and Abkhazia ended when control was handed over to EU observer mission on October 9th. On 9th September, 2008, Russia officially announced that its troops in South Ossetia and Abkhazia would thenceforth be considered foreign troops stationed in "independent states" under bilateral agreements. Russian Troops remain in South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Post-conflict incidents

Following the end of the war there were still several clashes in the coming months:
- On September 10, a Georgian policeman was killed allegedly by Russian soldiers in a village north of Gori.
- On September 13, a Georgian policeman was killed on the border between Abkhazia and Georgia.
- On September 21, a Georgian policeman was killed and three wounded on the border between Abkhazia and Georgia.
- On September 22, two Georgian policemen were wounded by a mine on the border between Abkhazia and Georgia.
- On September 25, a 13-year-old South Ossetian resident was killed when an explosive device blew up on the outskirts of Tskhinvali.
- On October 3, a car-bomb exploded in Tskhinvali, near the Russian peacekeeping headquarters, killing 13 people, another eight were wounded. The Russians and South Ossetians accused the Georgian Security Ministry of being behind the attack, the Georgians denied it and further accused the Russians of orchestrating the attack so they would have enough of a reason to maintain their military presence in Georgia. Among the dead was also the Russian chief of staff of peacekeeping operations.
- On October 6, an Abkhaz border guard was shot and killed on the border between Abkhazia and Georgia, allegedly by Georgian police commandos.
- On October 18, Georgian media reported that a bridge in the Adzva village in the Gori district was partly blown up by alleged Ossetian militia.
- On October 19, it was reported that Abkhazian militia opened fire towards the Georgian villages Khurcha and Shamgona. A bridge was hit but no people were injured during the shooting.
In mid-October 2008, South Ossetian police were given orders to return fire should they be on the receiving end of a firing from the Georgian side. This was seen as directive that could increase the threat of new violence. South Ossetia's top police official issued this order in response to a police post coming under automatic weapons fire from an ethnic Georgian village. The acting Interior Minister Mikhail Mindzayev said nobody was hurt by the gunfire, althought he did refer to is as a series of provocations by Georgians forces.

Infrastructure damage

This section needs expansion. You can help by making an edit requestadding to it . (August 2008)
1993 map showing the defense industries of Georgia at the time: Tbilaviamsheni, an aircraft assembly plant in Tbilisi which was bombed during the war, and component plants in other cities.

Georgia claimed Russia had bombed airfields and civil and economic infrastructure, including the Black Sea port of Poti. Between eight and eleven Russian jets reportedly hit container tanks and a shipbuilding plant at the port. Reuters reported that Georgian interior ministry officials claimed an attack on the civilian Tbilisi International Airport, though Russia rejected attack had place. Later, Georgian State Minister for Reintegration Temur Iakobashvili denounced the attack had place, stating, "There was no attack on the airport in Tbilisi. It was a factory that produces combat airplanes (Tbliaviamsheni, Tbilisi military avionics plant)."


According to Russian sources on August 15 and 17, about 20% of the Tskhinvali's buildings have suffered various damage, including 10% of "beyond repair". Separatist local authorities had earlier claimed that approximately 70% of Tskhinvali's buildings, both municipal and private, have suffered serious damage.

Retreating Georgian forces have reportedly mined civilian infrastructure in South Ossetia, including some private house basements civilians used to hide during the Georgian offensive.

Humanitarian impact

See also: Humanitarian response to the 2008 South Ossetia war

According to an 18 August report by Human Rights Watch (HRW), at the start of the military conflict on 7 August 2008, Georgian military used indiscriminate and disproportionate force resulting in civilian deaths in South Ossetia. The Russian military has since used indiscriminate force in attacks in South Ossetia and in the Gori district, and has apparently targeted convoys of civilians attempting to flee the conflict zones. HRW said that ongoing looting, arson attacks, and abductions by militia are terrorizing the civilian population, forcing them to flee their homes and preventing displaced people from returning home.

The organisation called the conflict a disaster for civilians, and said an international security mission should be deployed to help protect civilians and create a safe environment for the displaced to return home. HRW also called for international organisations to send fact-finding missions to establish the facts, report on human rights, and urge the authorities to account for any crimes. Alexander Brod of the Moscow Bureau for Human Rights, stated that groups such as Human Rights Watch are "in no position to make an objective assessment of war casualties." and said most western NGOs "report events from a Georgian perspective."

South Ossetians

On 8 August the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) urged the combatants to form a humanitarian corridor to evacuate the wounded and besieged civilians from within Tskhinvali. The fighting had disrupted electricity and telephone services, and denizens were reportedly forced to shelter in their basements without access to water or medical supplies. Russian media reported on 9 August that several journalists had gone into hiding as they appealed to the international community for right of passage. On 10 August the Russian Ambassador in Tbilisi claimed that "at least 2,000" people had been killed, and the chief of Russian ground forces said that the Georgian shelling has destroyed "all the hospitals" in Tskhinvali. Human Rights Watch documented the damage caused to the hospital building by a rocket believed to have been fired from a Grad multiple rocket launcher which hit the hospital, severely damaging treatment rooms on the second and third floors. One doctor told Human Rights Watch that she could not leave the hospital because of the heavy shelling that went on for 18 hours. The staff had to move all the patients into the hospital basement because of the constant shelling, where they continued to operate until 13 August, when all the patients were evacuated to Russia.

According to western media sources who had begun arriving in the city and were toured by the Russian military on 12 August, "everal residential areas seemed to have little damage", while the heaviest hit appeared to be buildings in and near the government district. Russia reported that 20% of some 7,000 buildings in Tskhinvali suffered any damage, half of which were beyond repair.

From 8 to 13 August, the Tskhinvali hospital treated 273 wounded, both military and civilians. Forty-four bodies had been brought to the hospital; these represented the majority of Ossetians killed in Tskhinvali, because the city morgue was not functioning due to the lack of electricity. On 14 August South Ossetian officials claimed they have identified 200 corpses of South Ossetian civilians, saying that 500 are missing; at the same time, Russian investigators said they had identified a total of 60 civilians killed during the fighting. By 18 August, following an investigation in South Ossetia and amongst refugees, the number of dead civilians identified was put by Russia at 133; nevertheless, South Ossetian officials said 1,492 people died.. On a Russian blog the higher number was defended by an eye witness.

South Ossetian women and children in a refugee camp set up in the town of Alagir, North Ossetia. Photo by Mikhail Evstafiev
File:South Ossetian refugee girl.jpg
Refugee from Tskhinvali in a refugee camp in the city of Alagir

HRW entered the mostly deserted Tskhinvali on 13 August and reported that it saw numerous apartment buildings and houses damaged by shelling. It said some of them had been hit by "inherently indiscriminate" weapons that should not be used in areas populated by civilians, such as rockets most likely fired from BM-21 Grad multiple rocket launchers. Since Georgian and Russian forces use identical Soviet-era weapons systems including Grad rockets, HRW couldn't definitely attribute specific battle damage to a particular belligerent, but witness accounts and the timing of the damage would point to Georgian fire accounting for much of the damage. In Tskhinvali, HRW saw numerous severely damaged civilian objects, including a hospital, apartment buildings, houses, schools, kindergartens, shops, administrative buildings, and the university. However, the group also noted that Ossetian militias in some neighborhoods took up defensive positions inside civilian apartment buildings, which drew fire from Georgian forces.

On 18 August South Ossetians alleged that they "estimate 500 Ossetian civilians were kidnapped and taken away by Georgian forces from the south of Tskhinvali". Georgian government answered: "They want to exchange for our hostages. The problem is we don't have any hostages so we can't do any exchange." By 20 August the South Ossetian estimate was scaled down to some 170 "peaceful citiziens" allegedly held by Georgia.

On August 26, Russian investigators said they found evidence of genocide by the Georgian military against South Ossetians. The Head of Russia's Investigative Committee, Aleksandr Bastrykin, said that witnesses reported that Georgian soldiers were throwing cluster bombs into shelters where civilians were hiding. He also said that investigators came across the body of a pregnant woman shot in the head.

On October 2 2008 Resolution 1633 of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) confirms that Georgian army used cluster munitions saying "he use of heavy weapons and cluster munitions, creating grave risks for civilians, constituted a disproportionate use of armed force by Georgia, albeit within its own territory, and as such a violation of international humanitarian law"

The UN refugee agency, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), said that thousands of refugees left South Ossetia, mostly for North Ossetia-Alania in Russia within the first days of the conflict. On 10 August, HRW obtained official figures on the number of displaced persons tallied by the Russian government agency in Vladikavkaz, according to which, the Federal Migration Service registered 24,032 persons who crossed the border from South Ossetia into Russia. However, 11,190 of those went back after the Russian intervention in the war; the government stated that “the overall number was decreasing because of the people who return to join to volunteer militias of South Ossetia”; furthermore, the figures cannot be considered accurate, as many people cross the border back and forth and thus get registered two or more times. On 15 August the UNHCR, relying on figures provided by Georgian and Russian officials, said at least 30,000 South Ossetians have fled across the border into North Ossetia. On 16 August, Russia put this number at over 10,000 refugees, indicating that majority had returned.

On 5 September the first Western delegation consisting of European MPs betook themselves towards Tskhinval on a journey organised by the Russian Duma. Lubomír Zaorálek, Deputy Chairman of the Chamber of Deputies of the Czech Republic stated during the tour: "I did not fathom what the military purpose of this action had been. There is nothing but demolished abodes of ordinary peoples. This is a crime against humaneness. I think that there should arrive as many as possible ambassadors and journalists in order to see with their own eyes what we had seen." Nikolay Kabanov from the Latvian Seim said: "Unfortunately I do not behold anyone from these MPs, who arrived in Tiflis, to see (here) the South Ossetian side of this horrendous conflict. I anticipated that there are great destructions but could not imagine that they were on a such scale". The Bulgarian MP Petar Kanev said that they did not see any military object hit by the Georgian army and that the Interior Ministry stayed untouched amidst ruins of civil edifices.

Georgians

Most refugees in the conflict are ethnic Georgians. Before the war started, one estimate of the population of Georgians living in South Ossetia was 18,000 people, or one quarter of the population of the break-away republic. On 15 August UNHCR said that up to 15,000 ethnic Georgians have fled into the other parts of Georgia from South Ossetia. In addition, as of 15 August, some 73,000 people were displaced in Georgia proper (most of them from the city Gori); many also fled from Abkhazia. Most had no possessions with them, save for the clothes they were wearing when they fled, and were crammed into makeshift centres without even basic amenities. By 19 August the UNHCR figure of the displaced persons rose to 158,000, the vast majority of them ethnic Georgians.

Between 9 and 12 August, residential districts and a media center in the Georgian city of Gori were attacked by Russian Air Force, killing and injuring numerous civilians (including several journalists, among them the Dutch cameraman Stan Storimans who died). On 15 August U.S. Human Rights Watch said it had collected evidence of Russian warplanes using RBK-250 cluster bombs, each containing 30 PTAB 2.5M submunitions; rights group urged Russia to stop using the weapons, which 107 nations have agreed to outlaw. On the same day, Russian General Nogovitsyn claimed: "We never use cluster bombs. There is no need to do so." During the final strikes, an air-to-ground missile smashed into the Gori hospital with deadly effect. On August 21, HRW reported that civilians continued to be killed and injured later due to contact with unexploded cluster munitions in Gori and at other locations.. Georgian military used Israeli-made M85 cluster munition against targets in South Ossetia, but according to the Georgian Ministry of Defense, they were used only on military targets. According to statement wich was announced on September 1, "Human Rights Watch has not independently confirmed this information, but has reported Russia’s use of cluster munitions during the fighting" ... it "is continuing to investigate use of cluster munitions by both Georgia and Russia."

Georgian refugees from South Ossetia asking for help outside the Georgian Parliament in Tbilisi on 10 August 2008.

On 10 August Georgia charged that ethnic cleansing of Georgians was occurring behind Russian lines. On 12 August HRW researchers in South Ossetia claimed that they witnessed at least four ethnic Georgian villages still burning from fires set by South Ossetian militias and witnessed looting by the militias. A HRW researcher said that "the remaining residents of these destroyed ethnic Georgian villages are facing desperate conditions, with no means of survival, no help, no protection, and nowhere to go." On 13 August an interviewed South Ossetian officer said that the forces "burned these houses (...) to make sure that they can’t come back." HRW also learned from an Ossetian officer about the summary execution of a Georgian combatant, and that the looters, who were "everywhere" in the Georgian villages in South Ossetia, have been "now moving to Gori".

On 12 August Associated Press (AP, U.S. source) journalists toured by the Russian military through Tskhinvali claimed that they witnessed numerous fires in what appeared to be deserted ethnic Georgian neighborhoods and saw evidence of looting in those areas; they said that while a Russian army officer touring claimed said some of the buildings had been burning for days from the fighting, in fact none of the houses was burning before more than 24 hours after the battle for the city was over. By14 August, already after the official ceasefire, many international media outlets reported Georgian government and refugee stories that Ossetian and often also other pro-Russian irregulars (including reports of Cossack and Chechen paramilitaries, and even some Russian regular soldiers) were looting and burning Georgian villages in South Ossetia and near Gori. Some of the emerging stories featured reports of atrocities, including kidnapping, rape and indiscriminate murder. These reports could not be independently confirmed; as BBC News summed it up on 14 August, "The testimonies of those who have fled villages around South Ossetia are consistent, but with all roads blocked and the Russian military now in charge of the area, the scale of alleged reprisal killings and lootings is difficult to verify." The new waves of Georgian refugees bringing reports of the widespread pillage and "revenge" killings in the territories occupied by the Russian forces kept coming over the next days.

On 13 August Russian interior minister Rashid Nurgaliev said there would be "decisive and tough" measures taken against looters; according to Russia's Interfax, two looters were executed by firing squad in South Ossetia. Nevertheless, on 15 August, The Daily Telegraph reporter witnessed South Ossetian irregulars continuing to loot and pillage around Gori, often with the encouragement of Russian troops, including a Russian officer shouting to "take whatever you want." Vehicles were even carjacked from the UN aid officials by paramiliaries while Russian soldiers watched. According to HRW, Russian military had indeed blocked the road from Java to Tskhinvali in an effort to prevent further attacks there, and by 14 August, researchers saw no more fires in this area; however, looting and burning of Georgian villages has continued in ethnic Georgian villages in Georgia's Gori district. On August 13, Major General Vyacheslav Borisov, the Russian commander in Georgia, was quoted as saying that "now Ossetians are running around and killing poor Georgians in their enclaves." Also on 15 August, the Russia-allied president Eduard Kokoity of South Ossetia, in the interview for Kommersant, officially acknowledged that the alleged ethnic cleansing of South Ossetia was in fact committed against ethnic Georgians, saying that his forces "offered them a corridor and gave the peaceful population the chance to leave" and that the Ossetians "do not intend to allow" their return.

Russian (Novaya Gazeta) and British (The Sunday Times) journalists embedded with the Russian and Ossetian forces reported that irregulars are abusing and executing captured Georgian soldiers and suspected combatants captured during the "mopping-up operations" in South Ossetia and beyond.

On 16 August an AP (American news agency) reporter witnessed groups of Georgian forced laborers in Tskhinvali under armed guard of Ossetians and Russians; South Ossetia's interior minister Mikhail Mindzayev acknowledged this, saying that the Georgians "are cleaning up after themselves." The Independent reported that around 40 Georgian civilian captives, mostly elderly men, were "paraded" through the city and abused by South Ossetians. On 18 August South Ossetian leaders put the number of the hostages at more than 130, roughly half of them women and mostly former Georgian guest workers. The kidnapping of civilians by warring parties is a war crime according to the Article 3 of the Fourth Geneva Convention.

On 17 August HRW appealed to Russian authorities to "immediately take steps to end Ossetian militia attacks on ethnic Georgians" in the Gori district of Georgia and for the Russian military to ensure safe passage for civilians wishing to leave the region and for humanitarian aid agencies to enter. The organisation said hundreds of vulnerable civilians still in the area, including many elderly; they said they are afraid to leave after learning about militia attacks on those who fled. The UN, which has described the humanitarian situation in the Russian military-controlled Gori as "desperate," has been able to deliver only limited food supplies to the city.

The looting and burning of Georgian villages in South Ossetia continued long after the ceasefire agreement had been signed. In the end of August it was reported that the Georgian villages Achabetiug, Kekhvi, Tamarasheni, Ksuisi and Eregvi were still under attack of Ossetian looters. It was also reported that according to South Ossetian officials ethnic Georgian civilians in South Ossetia were "detained for their own protection" and bussed to the Georgian side.

The Finnish Minister for Foreign Affairs and the OSCE chairman Alexander Stubb twice visited the war-affected area in Georgia and accused the Russian troops of "clearly trying to empty southern Ossetia of Georgians." On August 27, the French foreign minister Bernard Kouchner accused the Russian troops of "ethnic cleansing, creating a homogeneous South Ossetia."

On August 29 2008, the recently returned IDPs to the villages north of Gori which are still under the Russian military control had to flee a renewed harassments by the South Ossetian militias. The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) said that some 2,300 Georgian villagers arrived in Gori because of security concerns. The UNHCR official reported that that Russian forces had set up 18 checkpoints between Gori and South Ossetia, which were "an obstacle to the humanitarian relief effort and to people trying to return to their homes."

On September 8 it was reported that Russian soldiers prevented international aid convoys from visiting Georgian villages in South Ossetia. Likewise the ambassadors of Sweden, Latvia and Estonia had been barred from visiting Georgian villages beyond Russian checkpoints on September 5. The purpose of their visit had been to deliver aid, assess the situation and verify allegations of ethnic cleansing in they area. In a statement they said the restrictions violated the Vienna Convention on diplomatic relations and the cease-fire deal approved by Russia and Georgia.

Reactions to the conflict

International reaction

Main article: International reaction to the 2008 South Ossetia war See also: Protests regarding 2008 South Ossetia war and Controversy over Abkhazian and South Ossetian independence

In response to the war, Russia faced strong criticism from the US, the United Kingdom, Poland, Sweden and the Baltic states with Carl Bildt, foreign minister of Sweden and Chairman of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe, being quoted, Russia's claims it was defending Russian citizens in South Ossetia "recalled Hitler’s justifications of Nazi invasions" and President George W. Bush warning Russia: "Bullying and intimidation are not acceptable ways to conduct foreign policy in the 21st century." In contrast, Italy was more supportive of Russia, Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs Franco Frattini stating "We cannot create an anti-Russia coalition in Europe, and on this point we are close to Putin's position". France and Germany took an intermediate position, refraining from naming a culprit while calling for an end of hostilities.

Also in response to the war, Viktor Yushchenko, the president of Ukraine, said he intended to negotiate increasing the rent on the Russian naval base at Sevastopol in the Crimea. On the other hand, the Abkhazian government said it would invite Russia to establish a naval base in the port of Sukhumi. According to Russia, any re-negotiation of the use of the Ukraine naval base would break a 1997 agreement, under which Russia leases the base for $98 million a year until 2017. A controversy arose over how Ukraine should respond to the Ossetia war, which contributed to the 2008 Ukrainian political crisis.

Recognition of breakaway regions

Main article: International recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia independence

On 25 August 2008, the Federal Assembly of Russia unanimously voted to urge President Medvedev to recognise Abkhazia and South Ossetia as independent states. On 26 August 2008, Medvedev agreed, signing a decree officially recognising the two entities, and in a televised address to the Russian people expressed his opinion that recognising the independence of the two republic "represents the only possibility to save human lives." Georgia rejected this move outright as an annexation of its territory. Nicaragua recognised the republics on 5 September 2008.

The unilateral recognition by Russia was met by condemnation from NATO, the OSCE Chairman, the Presidency of the Council of the European Union, the European Commission, Foreign Ministers of the G7, and the government of Ukraine due to alleged violation of Georgia's territorial integrity, and United Nations Security Council resolutions. Russian policy of recognition was supported by the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation although no members of the SCO have followed suit with recognition of the two republics.

Discussion about responsibility for war and starting it

Andrei Illarionov, V. Putin's ex-advisor in economics topics, argues that Russia was the country to prepare and start the war, citing numerous evidence. However, his speech wasn't shown by Russian television.

German Spiegel online reported, on August 30 2008, that OSCE observers were blaming Georgia for triggering the crisis in a series of unofficial reports presented to the German government.

OSCE spokesman Martin Nesirky rejected the claim, saying "none of" its regular reports distributed to 56 members through diplomatic channels "contains information of the kind mentioned in the Der Spiegel story".

Russian military analyst Pavel Felgenhauer, observer of Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta and regular contributor to U.S. based think-tank Jamestown Foundation speculated in a Novaya Gazeta article that "Russia's invasion of Georgia had been planned in advance, with the final political decision to complete the preparations and start war in August apparently having been made back in April."

In September 2008, Irakli Okruashvili, Georgian defence minister from 2004 to 2006, reported in an interview to Reuters that in 2004-2006 he and Saakashvili worked together on military plans to invade South Ossetia and Abkhazia, adding "Abkhazia was our strategic priority, but we drew up military plans in 2005 for taking both Abkhazia and South Ossetia as well".

A US Defense official said that there was no obvious buildup of Russian forces along the border that signaled an intention to invade. "Once it did happen they were able to get the forces quickly and it was just a matter of taking the roads in. So it's not as though they were building up forces on the border, waiting," the official said.

Speaking at an event organised by the German Marshall Fund in Washington, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice acknowledged that Georgia had fired the first shots in the breakaway region of South Ossetia. This view was echoed by five former American Secretaries of State at a forum on presidential policy.

On 8 September, 2008, Dana Rohrabacher (Republican a senior member of the United States House of Representatives) Foreign Affairs Comittee, argued at a House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee meeting, according to The Daily Telegraph, that "the Georgians had initiated the recent military confrontation in the on-going Russian-South Ossetian conflict", citing unidentified U.S. intelligence sources. Further, Telegraph reported that "Mr. Rohrabacher insisted that Georgia was to blame", citing him: "The Georgians broke the truce, not the Russians, and no amount of talk of provocation and all this other stuff can alter that fact." Telegraph stated: ""His comments got little attention in the United States but have been played prominently on state-run Russian television bulletins and other media."

Judicial reaction

On 12 August 2008 Georgia instituted proceedings in the International Court of Justice against Russia for violations of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination. The case (Georgia v. Russian Federation) was accepted by the court on 15 August. The first public hearings has started at the Peace Palace in The Hague, seat of the Court on 8 September 2008. The delegation of Georgia was headed by Tina Burjaliani, First Deputy-Minister of Justice, and Maia Panjikidze, Ambassador of Georgia to the Netherlands. The delegation of Russia was headed by Roman Kolodkin, Director of Legal Department, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Kirill Gevorgian, Ambassador of Russia to the Netherlands.

Financial market reaction

Main article: Financial market reaction to 2008 South Ossetia war

AFP reported that unidentified analysts believed that Russian stock exchange declines in August/September 2008 have been attributed to "a mix of falling energy prices, global market turmoil and political issues including worries over the war with Georgia."

Harvard B-School professor Noel Maurer disagrees with the view that 2008 South Ossetia war had a substantial negative impact on Russian financial markets: "Russian indices were in decline well before the war started. If anything has happened since, it is that the decline has slowed. This is not consistent with the hypothesis that the markets are punishing Russia for the war."

The Georgian financial markets also suffered negative consequences as Fitch Ratings lowered Georgia's sovereign debt ratings from BB- to B+, commenting that there are increased risks to Georgian sovereign creditworthiness. Standard and Poor's also lowered Georgia's sovereign credit rating.

Map of Baku-Supsa and Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipelines through Georgia

While Georgia has no significant oil or gas reserves on its own, it is an important transit route that supplies the West, and journalists expressed fear that the war may damage the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline, 30% of which is owned by BP. The BTC pipeline was shut down before the conflict because of the blast in Turkey on August 6, 2008, that was threatened and then claimed by the PKK' and the war created further problems for the operating company Botas International Ltd.

Media coverage

Territories of the breakaway republics of Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Nagorno-Karabakh
Main article: Disinformation campaign during the 2008 South Ossetian war

An extensive information war was conducted during the military conflict.

Cyberattacks

During the war, Georgian and Russian websites were attacked by hackers, including several Georgian governmental pages that became briefly unreachable. In response Estonia sent two specialists in information security from the Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) Estonia to Georgia, and Georgia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs website was hosted on an Estonian server. The Office of the President of Poland provided the website for dissemination of information and helped to get access to the Internet for Georgia's government after breakdowns of local servers caused by cyberattacks.

Restrictions on access to TV stations and Web sites

The Georgian authorities decided on 11 August 2008 to “combat disinformation” by cutting all access to Russian TV station broadcasts.

Georgia’s leading ISP, Caucasus Online, was filtering the Russian domain name “.ru” thereby blocking access to the main Russian-language news websites .

Russian cable TV stations and websites with addresses ending in .ru have been inaccessible since the outbreak of the fighting on 8 August, as reported by Reporters Without Borders 10 September 2008. Temur Yakobashvili, the minister for reintegration, publicly claimed responsibility for blocking Russian TV broadcasts in Georgia.

NATO ships in the Black Sea

NATO has increased its naval presence in the Black Sea substantially compared to the situation before the war. Some NATO vessels did dock in Georgian ports, delivering baby food, care supplies, bottled water and milk according to the US navy. Additionally, NATO stressed that its presence in the Black Sea area is not related to the current tensions, that the vessels are conducting routine port visits and naval exercises with Romania and Bulgaria. President Dmitry Medvedev alleged delivery of military goods instead. Russian General Anatoly Nogovitsyn stated that NATO has exhausted the number of forces it is allowed to have in the Black Sea, under the 1936 Montreux convention, which among other stipulations limits the total tonnage of military ships in the Black Sea. He also warned Western nations against sending more ships.

Combatants

See also: Military of Georgia and Military of Russia

Military equipment

Georgia

Before the war, Georgia had 82 T-72 Main Battle Tanks, 139 Armoured Personnel Carriers (BMP and BTR variants), 7 Combat aircraft (Su-25 ground attack) and 95 Heavy artillery pieces (including Grad BM-21 122mm multiple rocket launchers.) Georgia had recently also been acquiring some western-made weaponry, including the UH-1 Iroquois helicopters and M4 Carbine rifles from the United States, 152mm SpGH DANA self-propelled guns and RM-70 Multiple rocket launchers from the Czech Republic and Slovakia, Turkish Otokar Cobra armoured vehicles, and German Heckler & Koch G36 and Israeli IMI Tavor TAR-21 rifles. According to a US military trainer, the Americans had trained Georgian soldiers with M-4 rifles, but when the fighting started, the Georgians went back to Soviet AK-47s, the only weapon they trusted and had serious firing problems. According to the Georgian Ministry of Defense, the Georgian armed forces had GRADLAR 160 multiple launch rocket systems and MK4 LAR 160 type (with M85 bomblets) rockets with a range of 45 kilometers. Ukraine had supplied Georgia with weapons, reportedly including Tor and Buk AA missile systems, Armoured Personnel Carriers and small arms.

The Gulf Times noted that Georgian air-defence sistems were outdated and inefficient. In contrast to that, U.S analysts mention that the air defense was "one of the few effective elements of the country's military" and credit the SA-11 Buk-1M with shooting down a Tupolev-22M's and contributing to the losses of the 3 Su-25s. A view mirrored by Russia's deputy chief of General Staff, Col. Gen. Anatoly Nogovitsyn who said the Tor and Buk missile systems were responsible for the downings of 4 Russian aircraft in the war.

In the aftermath of war Reuters cited some Stratfor analysts that believed that "Russia has largely destroyed Georgia's war-fighting capability" . An article in The New York Times claimed that during its retreat from South Ossetia Georgian army left behind a lot of military equipment

Russia

The New York Times reported that Russia’s military went into battle with aging equipment, including scores of tanks designed in the 1960s, and armored vehicles that broke down in large numbers along Georgia’s roads. In contrast, the Washington Times writes that the war showed "how supposedly obsolete weapons can still play a potent and even decisive role in modern war" and added that Russia didn't rely exclusively on old T-72s; state-of-the-art T-90 main battle tanks were also identified in action.

According to U.S. analysts Russia's forces in the conflict included 150 T-62 and T-72 tanks and 100 pieces of artillery. At least some T-80 and modern T-90 main battle tanks were sighted in the war. Old T-72s had been upgraded with reactive armor. Su-25, Su-27 and Su-24 strike aircraft were used to establish air superiority. Russia fired 15 OTR-21 Tochka short-range ballistic missiles in the conflict during August 8–11. An editorial in RIA Novosti claimed that forces deployed by the Russian army lacked unmanned combat aerial vehicles, which hurt their intelligence efforts and forced Russia to send a Tupolev Tu-22M3 strategic bomber on a reconnaissance mission. The same editorial stated that Russian Su-25 fighter jets still lacked radar sights, computers for calculating ground-target coordinates and long-range air-to-surface missiles that could be launched outside enemy air-defense areas.. According to Jane's Information Group, Russia also used BMP-1 and BMP-2 infantry vehicles, BTR-80 armored personnel carriers and MT-LB multipurpose tracked vehicles. According to Russian General Anatoly Nogovitsyn, deputy chief of the General Staff, no new arms were tested during the war.

Georgian order of battle

The Georgian army consisted of 4 regular infantry brigades, plus a fifth brigade in the process of formation. One artillery brigade was stationed at Gori and Khoni and a tank battalion also stationed at Gori.. In South Ossetia, Georgia reportedly committed several infantry battalions (likely part of the 4th infantry brigade) supported by T-72 tanks and artillery.

The 1st infantry brigade, being the only one trained to a NATO level, served in Iraq at the start of the war. 2-3 days into the war, it was airlifted to Georgia by the US airforce, too late to take part in the battle of Tskhinvali. The Georgian Air Force has also been engaged in the conflict. According to their American trainers, the Georgian soldiers don´t lack "warrior spirit", but weren´t ready for combat..

Military instructors and alleged use of foreign mercenaries

At the outbreak of the war 127 U.S. military trainers including 35 civilian contractors were present in Georgia. Additionally, 1000 soldiers had participated in the military exercise "Immediate Response 2008" which ended only days earlier. Several of these soldiers were still in the country. EUCOM stated that neither participated in the conflict. According to South Ossetian President Eduard Kokoity, quoted by pravda.ru, "many mercenaries from Ukraine and the Baltic states" participated in the fighting on the Georgian side. The allegations were never substantiated.

Russian-South-Ossetian and Russian-Abkhazian order of battle

Russian invasion of Georgia involved significant elements of the Russian 58th Army. According to the Center for Strategic and International Studies 58th Army is one of Russia’s premiere combat formations and boasts more than twice the number of troops, five times the number of tanks, ten times the number of armored personnel carriers and twelve times the number of combat aircraft as the entire Georgian Armed Forces

South Ossetian Sector

Abkhazian Sector

Air support

  • Fighter, attack, bomber and reconnaissance aircrafts of 4th Air Army (acting over South Ossetia, Abkhazia and Georgia proper)
  • Unnamed transport aviation units used for air-lift of units of 76th and 98th Airborne Divisions, Spetsnaz of 45th Detached Reconnaissance Regiment to South Ossetia and unnamed units of VDV to Abkhazia

See also

References

  1. http://www.kremlin.ru/eng/text/news/2008/08/205406.shtml President of Russia Dmitry Medvedev signed a plan to resolve the Georgian–South Ossetian conflict, based on the six principles previously agreed on. kremlin.ru
  2. Россия завершает операцию по принуждению Грузии к миру — Медведев RIA Novosti Aug 12, 2008
  3. "Statement by President of Russia Dmitry Medvedev". Russia's President web site. 2008-08-26. Retrieved 2008-08-26.
  4. 15,000 Russian troops in Georgia, U.S. administration officials say, CNN, August 13 2008
  5. ^ Krasnogir, Sergey (8 August 2008). "Расстановка сил" (in Russian). Lenta.Ru. Retrieved 2008-08-10. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) (Google Translate.)
  6. 5,000 without reservists, potential of 45,000 according to the Problems of the unrecognised states in the former USSR: South Caucasus by David Petrosyan; 5,000 without reservists, potential of 45,000 according to the "Caucasian-style militarism" article of the Nezavisimaya Gazeta
  7. http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,578273,00.html
  8. http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/georgia/mod.htm
  9. http://www.nationsencyclopedia.com/Europe/Georgia-ARMED-FORCES.html
  10. http://www.civil.ge/eng/article.php?id=19384
  11. Russia today, September 4, 2008
  12. Russia today, September 4, 2008
  13. Official Interim Report on Number of Casualties, Civil Georgia, 3 September, 2008
  14. Template:Es icon Rusia interviene en el Cáucaso para quedarse y controlar su espacio vital, El Pais, 2008-08-17
  15. List of killed and missing Georgian Military Servicemen, Ministry of Defence of Georgia, 17 October, 2008
  16. http://www.messenger.com.ge/issues/1679_august_29_2008/1679_exchange.html
  17. ^ Russian Invasion of Georgia: Facts & Figures, Civil Georgia, September 8, 2008
  18. The Number of Casualties Reported, Ministry of Defence of Georgia, 16 September, 2008
  19. ^ Georgia: Conflict Toll Confusion, IWPR, 25-Sep-08
  20. Official Georgian Death Toll at least 370, Civil Georgia, 16 Sep.'08
  21. http://www.ossetia-war.com/dvlist
  22. War killed 1,492 Ossetians - local officials, Russia Today, August 21 2008
  23. ^ List of killed South Ossetian ciizens as of 04.09.08, Список погибших граждан Южной Осетии на 04.09.08, 4 September 2008 Template:Ru icon; Russia scales down Georgia toll, BBC News, 20 August 2008; Russia says some 18,000 refugees return to S. Ossetia, RIA Novosti 21 August 2008
  24. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/aug/13/georgia
  25. HRW: Few civilians killed in South Ossetian war
  26. HRW: Few civilians killed in South Ossetian war
  27. http://www.cdi.org/russia/johnson/2008-175-23.cfm
  28. Russia trains its missiles on Tbilisi, AFP, August 19 2008
  29. ^ UNHCR secures safe passage for Georgians fearing further fighting, UNHCR, August 15 2008
  30. Template:Pl icon 100 tys. przemieszczonych z powodu konfliktu w Gruzji, Polska Agencja Prasowa, 12.08.2008
  31. Despair among Georgia's displaced, BBC News, 20 August 2008
  32. ""Human Rights Watch Counts South Ossetian Casualties, Displaced". Deutsche Welle. 11 August 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-11. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  33. Roots of Georgia-Russia clash run deep, The Christian Science Monitor, August 12 2008
  34. http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,574812-2,00.html
  35. Blomfield, Adrian (2008-08-08). "Caucasus in crisis: Georgia invades rebel region". The Daily Telegraph. Press Acquisitions Limited. Retrieved 2008-08-31. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  36. http://www.heritage.org/research/RussiaandEurasia/wm2017.cfm
  37. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/13/world/europe/13georgia.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
  38. The West Begins to Doubt Georgian Leader
  39. ^ Georgia offers fresh evidence on war's start The New York Times Sept 15, 2008.
  40. Abkhazia launches operation to force Georgian troops out
  41. [http://english.aljazeera.net/news/europe/2008/08/2008813153517926662.html Aljazeera, 14 August 2008
  42. Day-by-day: Georgia-Russia crisis
  43. "Russian President Orders Halt To Military Operations In Georgia". GlobalSecurity.org. 2008-08-12. Retrieved 2008-10-06.
  44. ^ Georgian villages burned and looted as Russian tanks advance", The Guardian, August 14 2008
  45. "Russia completes troop pullout from S.Ossetia buffer zone". Moscow: RIA Novosti. 8 October 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
  46. http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSTRE4973IZ20081011
  47. "Q&A: Violence in South Ossetia". BBC News. 2008-08-08. Retrieved 2008-08-09.
  48. ^ As Soviet Union Dissolved, Enclave’s Fabric Unraveled NYTimes Retrieved on 06-09-08
  49. "We are at war with Russia, declares Georgian leader". The Independent. 2008-08-09. Retrieved 2008-08-09. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  50. Associated Press (2008-08-08). "Facts about South Ossetia". International Herald Tribune. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
  51. http://sojcc.ru/eng_news/911.html South-Ossetian part of JCC draws attention to the activities of the Georgian JPKF battalion
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  299. If Pres Yushchenko gives express order to bar Russian ships from returning to Sevastopol, this order can be executed, ex-Defence Minister Hrytsenko claims ZIK.com, Accessed Thursday, 14 August 2008
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  304. ANALYSIS: Older weapons' efficacy evident in Georgia conflict
  305. ANALYSIS: Older weapons' efficacy evident in Georgia conflict
  306. Pledging to Leave Georgia, Russia Tightens Its Grip
  307. Russian Army's weaknesses exposed during war in Georgia
  308. Russian Army's weaknesses exposed during war in Georgia
  309. Georgia War Shows Russia Army Now a `Force to Be Reckoned With'
  310. Georgia War Shows Russia Army Now a `Force to Be Reckoned With'
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  316. U.S. troops, contractors in Georgia not believed to be at risk By Pat Dickson and John Vandiver, Stars and Stripes August 9 2008
  317. "Georgia used US and Ukrainian mercenaries in its aggression against South Ossetia".
  318. Hamilton, Robert E. (2008-09-04). "A Resolute Strategy on Georgia" (PDF). Center for Strategic and International Studies. Retrieved 2008-10-11. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  319. ^ "В Цхинвали вошли подразделения Воздушно-десантных войск" (in Russian). Russian Ministry of Defence. Retrieved 2008-08-09.
  320. ^ "В зону конфликта переброшены роты чеченских батальонов "Восток" и "Запад"".
  321. Российских военных обучают как вести себя в случае грузино-абхазского конфликта 11/07/08
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  323. "Black Sea Fleet Moving Towards Georgia".

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