Type | Journal Article - Religion and Conflict |
Title | Georgia’s PankisiI Gorge |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2002 |
Page numbers | 373-380 |
URL | http://www.cpc-ew.ro/pdfs/religion and conflict radicalization.pdf#page=405 |
Abstract | Georgia’s Pankisi Gorge became the focus of much international attention in 2001-2002. After the Second Chechen War, several thousand refugees found shelter in the Pankisi Gorge. Then, Russia complained thatGorge had become a safe haven for militants and terrorists. Russia put much pressure on Georgia to eradicate the terrorist groups or to give the right to the Russian side to control the situation in Pankisi. In early February 2002, the American Chargé d’Affaires in Tbilisi, Philip Remler, asserted that Islamic radicals fleeing Afghanistan were moving into the region. To help Georgian authorities reestablish control of the region, the U.S. government announced that it would send 100-150 Special Forces advisors to Georgia to train the country’s counterinsurgency troops. The announcement was met with an outcry by many officials in Moscow, who took this as evidence of yet another American encroachment into Russia’s traditional sphere of influence. The protests only abated after Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, stated that, in his opinion, the U.S. military support for Georgia was in fact “no tragedy” |
» | Georgia - General Population Census of 2002 |