Russian feint towards Tbilisi shows truce fragile
GEORGIA: Fifty battered Russian army trucks and armored
personnel carriers roared without warning down the highway toward the
country’s capital, making it clear that a day-old cease-fire will not
keep Russia from moving freely through Georgia.
“Come with us, beauty, we’re going to Tbilisi!” one of the soldiers
bellowed at a photographer in a sleeveless shirt along the road. Other
troops grinned and brandished their weapons, and one hung his bare feet
out the back of a truck.
Another, a machine gunner riding atop an armored vehicle, wore a
bandanna and a black T-shirt with the word “Russia” emblazoned in the
red, blue and white colors of the national flag.
Asked from the side of the road, the soldiers shouted that their
destination was Tbilisi - “With no detours,” one said. But then they
veered abruptly into a field about an hour’s drive from the capital and
camped conspicuously within sight of the road before the sun went down.
The message was hard to miss: The Russian military is still the
landlord in swaths of Georgia, and its forces remain in easy striking
distance of the country’s capital.
Meanwhile, 10 kilometers (6 miles) down the road and well inside
Georgia, a small contingent of subdued and edgy Georgian troops gathered
and began preparing a defense line - an acknowledgment that swaths of
their country are still under Russian control.
Two vintage cannons were wheeled into position facing in the
direction of the Russians. Nearby, crack troops equipped with pistols,
Kalashnikovs and anti-tank rockets, waited by their olive-drab pickup
trucks. One of them played with a puppy.
Other Georgian units were visible along the road closer to the
capital. But nearly the only people traveling toward Tbilisi were
refugees, a steady, dejected trickle of Georgians fleeing the front line
area in overloaded cars, trucks and tractor-pulled wagons.
In one Soviet-era car were eight people, including a dejected mother
holding a baby in the front seat. The back door of a small blue van
swung open to reveal at least a dozen people crowded inside.
One army surplus truck ran out of gas behind the Georgian lines, and
its dejected passengers waited alongside the road. One woman who
identified herself only as Nina, 57, said she fled her village, Karaleti,
when it was assaulted and torched by the Russians earlier in the day.
Her account could not be independently confirmed.
Before the surprise arrival of the Russian convoy, Georgians were
debating whether Russian tanks were indeed in the center of the town of
Gori, as some reports suggested - a violation of the cease-fire brokered
Tuesday that demands a full withdrawal to pre-fighting lines. Gori,
which has largely been abandoned, is a Georgian town that borders the
breakaway territory of South Ossetia. Road to tbilisi, Wednesday, AP |