By Anna Nemtsova
On a sunny afternoon two Georgian police commanders stood on a tiny bridge over a dizzying mountain gorge and the roiling water of the Kodori River. They waved to Russian peacekeepers on the other side, inviting them to come across and talk to a group of foreign correspondents. After a few minutes, two Russian soldiers slowly walked to the middle of the bridge, but only to ask the reporters to please stop taking pictures of them. "We will not come over for any discussions,"one said, and walked back.
The Georgian commander in this obscure but seemingly ever worsening standoff in the Caucasus Mountains, Soso Bregvadze, said the tension is increasing to "the boiling temperature" after the Russians deployed an additional 400 paratroopers and artillery men in Kodori. In an ominous sign, Russian peacekeepers, he noted, stopped saying "Hi" to Georgians on the other side of the bridge. "Only a few weeks ago, we could have tea with Russians and take pictures of each other on this bridge," he said with a sigh. "Not any longer.
The tension between Russia and Georgia over Abkhazia, the Georgian separatist republic, has been growing steadily since last year -- and many Georgians fear that tensions will boil over into full-scale armed conflict soon. Ever since the Black Sea enclave broke away from Georgia proper in 1992, its separatist leaders have turned to Russia for political and practical support. Russian peacekeepers who have been stationed in Abkhazia have been accused of channeling military to the separatist military forces, and in March an unmanned Georgian drone aircraft was shot down over Abkhazian airspace by a Russian military jet -- a version of events recently confirmed by a United Nations investigation. Georgia fears that as it grows closer to NATO and the European Union, the more Russia will try to destabilize the situation in Abkhazia as a way of undermining Georgia's fervently pro-Western President Mikheil Saakashvili
In the last two years, Russian authorities issued Russian passports and paid Russian pensions to a majority of Abkhaz population, despite protests of Georgian officials. On April 19, Vladimir Putin, then the lame-duck president, issued a decree opening direct trade, transportation and political relations with the secessionist territories of Abkhazia and South Ossetia - something the Georgians said was all but a declaration of war. They also say it is tantamount to recognizing the ethnic cleansing of Georgians that took place here, in a dark,earlier chapter of the conflict in the early 1990s.
Both Russia and Akhaz officials say that 2,542 soldiers were based in Abkhazia, the maximum permitted under the agreement of ceasefire Russia signed in 1994. Georgian officials say that by deploying additional forces last month and increasing the number of forces up to 3500 soldiers, Russia broke the agreement. Every day for the last few weeks both Russian and Georgian news agencies report the increasing numbers of soldiers on both sides of this mountain boundary. To keep the information about the number of Russian military in Abkhazia up to date, on April 20th, Georgian police forces sent an Israeli-made drone to fly over Abkhazia. According to a U.N.investigation, the drone was shot down the same day by a Russian fighter aircraft--either a MIG-29 or an Su-27. The Georgians posted a video,shot by the drone itself, on the Internet. The UN report noted that Russia's action "undercuts the ceasefire and separation of forces regime."
President Mikheil Saakshvili called the statement, at least, a victory. For the first time since the war, Europe finally woke up and recognized Russian aggression, he said. “This is not Georgia the Kremlin is against, but America and NATO," he said. "Unlucky Georgia, as American ally in the former Soviet Union, happened to be between two fires."
"We are worried about possible Russian provocations related with Kosovo situation. We hope to avoid the war. I don't think anyone sane in Russia would want such trouble to happen in Caucuses."
He said if Russia ever gave Georgia and Abkhazia a chance to negotiate honestly, the conflict would have been resolved long ago:"The Russian FSB does not hide the fact that they control the situation in Abkhazia, and the Abkhaz president does not answer the phone when I try to call. Even if we had a chance to sit and talk to Abkhaz people in some room, there would always be an elephant in that room breaking up the furniture."
On Monday, Georgian Independence Day, Saakashvili received a greeting message from Russian President Medvedev that offered some glimmer of hope. “I sincerely wish the Georgian people, with whom we are bounded by many centuries of friendship and common spirit, will live in peace and prosperity," the message said. "I count on cooperation between our countries in the interest of developing friendly neighboring relations."
On the border, though, the gorge still separates the evergrowing numbers of troops on both sides.