Russia's Defense Ministry issued a stern warning to Georgia
on Tuesday over its actions in its conflict zones, and pledged
to deploy more Russian peacekeepers in the area.
The ministry said that violence against Russians in Abkhazia
and South Ossetia, breakaway Georgian provinces, would be
met with tough reprisals from the Russian side.
"Any attempts by Georgia to use force to resolve the
conflicts, or to employ violent measures against Russian peacekeepers
or Russian citizens living in Abkhazia and South Ossetia will
encounter an appropriate and tough response," the ministry
said in a statement.
The statement said Georgian aggression has forced Russia
to increase peacekeeping numbers in the conflict zones.
(Article continues below)
Russia's Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday that Georgia is
preparing to launch a military operation against Abkhazia.
Georgia is amassing troops, weaponry, ammunition, food and
material supplies in the upper Kodori region on the border
with Abkhazia, the statement said.
"The number of troops and police exceeds 1,500... The
composition of the contingent indicates that Georgia is preparing
to launch a military operation against Abkhazia," the
ministry said.
Abkhazia and South Ossetia broke away from Georgia in 1991
following the collapse of the Soviet Union. Georgia is looking
to regain control over the two republics.
Russian President Vladimir Putin called earlier this month
for closer ties with the breakaway republics. Putin's statement
provoked an angry response from Tbilisi, which accused Russia
of attempting to annex the two republics.
Georgia also claims that on April 20 a Russian MiG-29 Fulcrum
fighter from the Gudauta military base in Abkhazia, where
Russian peacekeepers have been stationed since the end of
a bloody conflict in the early 1990s, shot down a Georgian
drone, a claim Russia has denied.
The incidents have seen relations between Moscow and Tbilisi
plunge to a new low.
Ex-Soviet breakaway regions have stepped up their drives
for self-rule since Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence
from Serbia on February 17. Abkhazia and South Ossetia, along
with Moldova's Transdnestr, have all asked Russia's parliament,
the UN, and other organizations to recognize their independence.