It
has never been in dispute whether our forces entered
So
the question is not whether
The
question is, rather: What democratic polity would have acted any differently
while its citizens were being slaughtered as its sovereign territory was being
invaded? South Ossetia and Abkhazia are
internationally recognized as part of
We
fought to repel a foreign invasion. Georgians never stepped beyond Georgian
territory.
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December
2, 2008
Some
people seem to misunderstand which country was invaded.
By
MIKHEIL SAAKASHVILI
Since
This question has been pushed to the
center in large degree by a fierce, multimillion-dollar Russian PR campaign
that hinges on leaked, very partial, and misleading reports from a military
observer from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) that
claimed Georgia responded militarily in South Ossetia without sufficient
provocation by Russia. Judging from recent media coverage, this campaign has
been successful.
Focusing on this question distracts from
I made this decision after being
confronted by two facts. First, Russia had massed hundreds of tanks and
thousands of soldiers on the border between Russian and Georgia in the area of
South Ossetia. We had firm intelligence that they were crossing into Georgia, a
fact later confirmed by telephone intercepts verified by the New York Times and
others -- and a fact never substantially denied by Russia. (We had alerted the
international community both about the military deployment and an inflow of
mercenaries early on Aug. 7.)
Second, for a week Russian forces and
their proxies engaged in a series of deadly provocations, shelling Georgian
villages that were under my government's control -- with much of the artillery
located in Tskhinvali, often within sites controlled by Russian peacekeepers. Then,
on Aug. 7, Russia and its proxies killed several Georgian peacekeepers. Russian
peacekeepers and OSCE observers admitted that they were incapable of preventing
the lethal attacks. In fact, the OSCE had proven impotent in preventing the
Russians from building two illegal military bases inside South Ossetia during
the preceding year.
So the question is not whether Georgia
ordered military action -- including targeting of the artillery sites that were
shelling villages controlled by our government. We did.
The question is, rather: What democratic
polity would have acted any differently while its citizens were being
slaughtered as its sovereign territory was being invaded? South Ossetia and
Abkhazia are internationally recognized as part of Georgia, and even some areas
within these conflict zones were under Georgian government control before the
Russian invasion. We fought to repel a foreign invasion. Georgians never
stepped beyond Georgian territory.
My government has urged the
international community to open an independent, unbiased investigation into the
origins of the war. I first proposed this on Aug. 17, standing with German
Chancellor Angela Merkel in Tbilisi. I offered to make every shred of evidence
and every witness available. Russia has yet to accede to such terms of inquiry.
Also, last Friday I stood for several
hours before a commission established by the Georgian Parliament, chaired by a
leader of an opposition party, to investigate the conduct of the war. This is
the first time that any leader from this part of the world has been scrutinized
live on national television for his or her wartime decisions by a legislative
investigation. I have also required every member of my administration and
military to make themselves available to the committee.
The real test of the legitimacy of
Russia's actions should be based not on whether Georgia's democratically
elected leadership came to the defense of its own people on its own land, but
on an assessment of the following questions. Was it Georgia or Russia (and its
proxies) that:
- Pursued the de facto annexation of the
sovereign territory of a neighboring state?
- Illegally issued passports to
residents of a neighboring democracy in order to create a pretext for invasion
(to "protect its citizens")?
- Sent hundreds of tanks and thousands
of soldiers across the internationally recognized borders of a neighboring
democracy?
- Instigated a series of deadly
provocations and open attacks over the course of many months, resulting in
civilian casualties?
- Refused to engage in meaningful, bilateral
dialogue on peace proposals?
- Constantly blocked all international
peacekeeping efforts?
- Refused to attend urgent peace talks
on
- When the crisis began to escalate,
refused to have any meaningful contact (I tried to reach President Dmitry
Medvedev on both Aug. 6 and 7, but he refused my calls)?
- Tried to cover up a long-planned
invasion by claiming, on Aug. 8, that
- Refused to permit EU monitors
unrestricted access to these conflict areas after the fighting ended, while
engaging in the brutal ethnic cleansing of Georgians?
These are the questions that need to be
answered. The fact that none can be answered in
Responding firmly to the Putin-Medvedev
government implies neither the isolation nor the abandonment of
We all hope that
Mr. Saakashvili is president of