I am Wondering if this is a result of Georgia's close relationship with Israel. Israel sent a thousand soldiers in 2008 and gave Georgia a billion dollars of our tax money we sent as foreign aid to Israel, to help Georgians to aggress against a Russian province to slaughter citizens of that independant province of Russia. Nice, huh? So now we have two countries like that. Be careful, if they are allowed to continue, there will be even more. Heaven forbid. To be honest, the globe is
barely able to tolerate just one country like that, much less two of them.
Last month Georgia claimed its forces had killed 11 militants who infiltrated the country through the Russian republic of Dagestan in a special operation personally led by the Georgian interior minister.
But Khizri Aldamov, who was an emissary of Chechen militants in Georgia for 18 years, before switching sides and returning to the fold of Moscow loyalist Ramzan Kadyrov earlier this year, has now put forward a different version of events.
In a recent video conference at Moscow’s Ria Novosti news agency, he claimed the people shot were recruited by Georgia to stir up Chechen separatism in Russia, and the whole operation was staged.
“Georgian President Saakashvili’s plan was to send his own guys across the border into Russia, not the other way round, and then shoot them. But there was no mission; this was a set-up,” Aldamov told RT.
He says the purpose of the operation was to frame Russia as a state sponsor of terrorism, and present Georgia as an anti-terrorist force, while getting rid of those Aldamov says “knew too much” about the country’s Islamic training program.
“Saakashvili is allergic to Russia, allergic to Putin, allergic to Kadyrov,” said Aldamov.
The two neighbors have been locked in a long-standing dispute over the two republics of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, whose independence Moscow supports, a conflict which escalated after the August 2008 war.
Along with some of the Georgian media, Aldamov questions some of the details of Tbilisi’s operation against the militants, the aftermath of which was shown on Georgian television.
“First of all, their weapons were American-made, second – none of them fired a single shot. That's not all; the uniforms of these so-called fighters were brand new,” he alleges.
Aldamov claims that in his role as a go-between for Georgia and Chechen separatists, he trained many Islamist recruits himself. The practice supposedly continues today in Georgia, through the official Counter Terror Center.
“Everything is still controlled by the center – all the Mujahideen are in its hands. Any Chechen who lives in Georgia and wants to study in an Islamic country has to go through the center, and there they recruit him.”
Aldamov’s allegations caused a stir, but have not received universal endorsement.
Badri Nachkebia, a Georgian expert in conflict and political violence present at the conference, questioned whether Aldamov had a pro-Russian agenda after his sudden return to Chechnya.
Meanwhile, political expert Nana Devdariani said that while the country may have harbored Chechen militants, it is unlikely that the operation was an inside job, or that there was a border crossing from Georgia into Russia, considering how well fortified the Russian side is.
On the official level, Georgian ministers insist there was a crossing from Dagestan, while Russian officials have categorically denied the claim.
In the clandestine circumstances of a simmering regional conflict where both sides have an agenda (not to mention that Georgia faces a national election next week), the truth will be hard to come by, and claims such as Aldamov’s may be impossible to confirm or deny.
barely able to tolerate just one country like that, much less two of them.
(VN: Well look at the map of Khazaria from 600 to 800 AD and notice where Georgia is. 760 AD is when the Mongols arrived in Khazaria to take it over, and this was the map of what Khazaria controlled. Georgia, used to be part of Khazaria, and is being used by the khazar Israeli leaders to get back at the Russians that now occupy Khazaria. It was a false flag hoping to start a world war with the US, Georgia and Israel on one side and Russia and her allies on the other side. To bad they screwed up. Wasted lives, but then satanists don't care about such trivialities unless its their children. )
NOW, you can understand what this is all about. Its the khazars that took over Russia in 1917, and have run the country ever since. But then Russians almost kicked Putin, Israel's puppet, out of Russian office. He barely got in. So this false flag was a cover for putin since Israel needs those uppity Russians back where they were before they got their independance. All of this got exposed so they could not
do another WW III. They have to create a false flag that we will buy. This is where non cooperation comes in. WE SHOULD NOT FIGHT THE RUSSIAN PEOPLE,
NOR THEY US, RATHER THE INTERNATIONAL BANKERS AND THEY CAN BE
FOUND IN THE CITY OF LONDON AND THAT IS WHERE THE MISSLES
SHOULD BE DIRECTED IF WAR STARTS.
do another WW III. They have to create a false flag that we will buy. This is where non cooperation comes in. WE SHOULD NOT FIGHT THE RUSSIAN PEOPLE,
NOR THEY US, RATHER THE INTERNATIONAL BANKERS AND THEY CAN BE
FOUND IN THE CITY OF LONDON AND THAT IS WHERE THE MISSLES
SHOULD BE DIRECTED IF WAR STARTS.
Chechen ex-militant: Georgia trained anti-Russian terrorists, then killed them in false flag op
http://russianfreedomforum.lefora.com/2012/10/02/chechens-armed-with-us-weapons-never-fired-a-shot-/#post0
Published: by Shablon, Russian Freedom Forum
29 September, 2012, 03:33
Georgian police snipers ride along a road in a mountain gorge near the border with Russia's Dagestan region, on August 29, 2012 (AFP Photo)
(26.8Mb) embed video
(26.8Mb) embed video
A former Chechen militant has accused Georgia of training a network of Islamic terrorists, claiming that a recent anti-terrorist mission on the border with Russia was in fact a pseudo-operation targeting Georgian-trained jihadists.
Last month Georgia claimed its forces had killed 11 militants who infiltrated the country through the Russian republic of Dagestan in a special operation personally led by the Georgian interior minister.
But Khizri Aldamov, who was an emissary of Chechen militants in Georgia for 18 years, before switching sides and returning to the fold of Moscow loyalist Ramzan Kadyrov earlier this year, has now put forward a different version of events.
In a recent video conference at Moscow’s Ria Novosti news agency, he claimed the people shot were recruited by Georgia to stir up Chechen separatism in Russia, and the whole operation was staged.
“Georgian President Saakashvili’s plan was to send his own guys across the border into Russia, not the other way round, and then shoot them. But there was no mission; this was a set-up,” Aldamov told RT.
He says the purpose of the operation was to frame Russia as a state sponsor of terrorism, and present Georgia as an anti-terrorist force, while getting rid of those Aldamov says “knew too much” about the country’s Islamic training program.
“Saakashvili is allergic to Russia, allergic to Putin, allergic to Kadyrov,” said Aldamov.
The two neighbors have been locked in a long-standing dispute over the two republics of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, whose independence Moscow supports, a conflict which escalated after the August 2008 war.
Along with some of the Georgian media, Aldamov questions some of the details of Tbilisi’s operation against the militants, the aftermath of which was shown on Georgian television.
“First of all, their weapons were American-made, second – none of them fired a single shot. That's not all; the uniforms of these so-called fighters were brand new,” he alleges.
Aldamov claims that in his role as a go-between for Georgia and Chechen separatists, he trained many Islamist recruits himself. The practice supposedly continues today in Georgia, through the official Counter Terror Center.
“Everything is still controlled by the center – all the Mujahideen are in its hands. Any Chechen who lives in Georgia and wants to study in an Islamic country has to go through the center, and there they recruit him.”
Aldamov’s allegations caused a stir, but have not received universal endorsement.
Badri Nachkebia, a Georgian expert in conflict and political violence present at the conference, questioned whether Aldamov had a pro-Russian agenda after his sudden return to Chechnya.
He also contradicted the assertion that the militants had been killed with one shot each – as if by their trusted allies – noting that three Georgian special services soldiers had been killed during the operation, and six more injured.
Meanwhile, political expert Nana Devdariani said that while the country may have harbored Chechen militants, it is unlikely that the operation was an inside job, or that there was a border crossing from Georgia into Russia, considering how well fortified the Russian side is.
On the official level, Georgian ministers insist there was a crossing from Dagestan, while Russian officials have categorically denied the claim.
In the clandestine circumstances of a simmering regional conflict where both sides have an agenda (not to mention that Georgia faces a national election next week), the truth will be hard to come by, and claims such as Aldamov’s may be impossible to confirm or deny.
02 October 2012 11:48 P
M
M
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