[Peace-discuss] Will he be ambassador long?
C. G. Estabrook
galliher at uiuc.edu
Sat Aug 23 22:53:30 CDT 2008
Russia's first Georgia move legitimate: U.S. envoy
Reuters
August 22, 2008
MOSCOW — The U.S. ambassador to Moscow, in a rare U.S. comment endorsing
Russia's initial moves in Georgia, described the Kremlin's first military
response as legitimate after Russian troops came under attack.
U.S officials, including President George W. Bush, have strongly criticized
Moscow's subsequent action but have not focused on the initial chain of events
that triggered the conflict between Russian and U.S.-ally Georgia.
The war broke out after Georgia tried to retake its Moscow-backed breakaway
region of South Ossetia, prompting a counter-attack by Russian forces.
In his first major interview since his arrival as Ambassador last month, John
Beyrle gave the Russian daily Kommersant his views on the conflict and warned
about its impact on U.S. investor confidence in Russia.
“Now we see Russian forces, which responded to attacks on Russian peacekeepers
in South Ossetia, legitimately, we see those forces now having advanced on to
the soil of Georgia; Georgian territorial integrity is in question here,” Mr.
Beyrle told the newspaper.
He said Washington had not sanctioned Georgia's initial actions when on Aug. 8,
after a succession of tense skirmishes, Georgian forces attacked South Ossetia,
triggering a massive Russian reaction when its peacekeepers there came under fire.
“We did not want to see a recourse to violence and force and we made that very,
very clear,” Mr. Beyrle was cited as saying in quotes the U.S. embassy confirmed
as accurate.
“The fact that we were trying to convince the Georgian side not to take this
step is clear evidence that we did not want all this to happen,” Mr. Beyrle said
in the interview, which was published on Friday.
“We have seen the destruction of civilian infrastructure, as well as calls by
some Russian politicians to change the democratically-elected government of
Georgia. Some question the territorial integrity of Georgia. That is why we
believe that Russia has gone too far,” the envoy said.
Mr. Beyrle said Washington still supports Russia's bid to join the World Trade
Organization, which has still not been finalized after more than a decade of talks.
“But American investors are now looking at the situation around Russia with
concern and asking questions,” he said.
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