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:pke:Bush accuses Russia over Georgia cease-fireStory Highlights
President Bush sending Sec. of State Condoleezza Rice to France, Tbilisi

Russia denies troops convoy heading for the Georgian capital

Georgian president claims Russia is "rampaging" through Gori

Georgia, Russia accuse each other of violating cease-fire agreement
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TBILISI, Georgia (CNN) -- President Bush said Wednesday that the United States has received reports of Russian actions that are "inconsistent" with Moscow's statement it had halted military operations in Georgia.


President Bush says he is sending Secretary of State Rice to France and Georgia to discuss the conflict.

1 of 3 more photos » more photos » more photos » more photos » His remarks came amid fears a Russian convoy advance into Georgia, and claims of violations on both sides, has left in tatters a one-day-old agreement by both sides to return to pre-hostility positions.

"The United States and the world expect Russia to honor that commitment," Bush said, adding that he was concerned over reports of Russian unit movements near the conflict-hit Georgian city of Gori.

Bush said he was sending Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to France and Georgia to discuss the violence over disputed provinces with Georgia's borders.

President Bush also said U.S. Defense Robert Gates will oversee a "vigorous and ongoing" humanitarian mission to Georgia involving aircraft and Naval forces. It was not immediately clear when the mission will begin. Watch Bush pledge "unwavering support" for Georgia »

Russia insists its movement of troops along the road to the Georgian capital of Tbilisi is not an act of aggression, and has rejected accusations it is not respecting the cease-fire.

A spokesman for Russia's Foreign Ministry bristled at reports that Russia had breached the cease-fire, and said they "are not reflecting the real situation."

"We as the Russian Federation are (sticking) to the agreement which (has) been made in Moscow yesterday and we hope that the other side will show its readiness to do the same," Andrei Nesterenko told CNN.

Russia says its convoy was merely on a short-range demilitarizing mission on the road to the Georgian capital Tbilisi, but both sides in the conflict have traded accusations that the cease-fire was being violated.

CNN correspondent Matthew Chance, who was riding with the Russian convoy, said there was no resistance from Georgian soldiers, and it was possible that the Russians were on a scouting mission to choose a buffer zone between the breakaway region of South Ossetia and Georgian territory. Chance described the flag-waving Russians as relaxed. Watch Russian spokesman explain tank movement

He said most soldiers refused to comment, but one told him: "We have come here with the approval of the Georgian people."

Earlier Wednesday, a Georgian official told CNN the troops were headed to the abandoned military base Uplistsikhe, which they intended to destroy. The base is six miles (10 kilometers) east of Gori. Watch more on the convoy outside Gori »

A cease-fire agreement reached Tuesday between Georgia and Russia through the mediation efforts of France called for both forces to return to the positions they held on August 6.

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili told CNN Wednesday that Russian forces "are encroaching upon the capital" in violation of a cease-fire agreement. He said the Russians never intended to hold up their end of the truce agreed to Tuesday.

"This is the kind of cease-fire that, I don't know, they had with Afghanistan I guess in 1979," Saakashvili said. "There is no cease-fire, they [Russian forces] are moving around." Watch Saakashvili speak »

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Special: Georgia Crisis
The column of Russian military vehicles, including armored personnel carriers and trucks carrying Russian troops, had been traveling slowly toward the Georgian capital of Tbilisi, and was about 30 miles away, Chance said, before it turned. The convoy was about 10 miles from Gori, he said.

The Russian General Staff in Moscow accused the Georgians of not honoring the cease-fire, saying Georgia troops should return to their barracks.

Saakashvili told CNN Western leaders had "failed to analyze Russia's intentions" before it invaded Georgia and "are partly to blame" for the current situation. iReport.com: Share your story of how the crisis is affecting you

"The response has not been adequate," Saakashvili said. "Not only those people who are committing all those atrocities are responsible, but those who don't react to that, I think they also share responsibility."

The six-point deal agreed between the sides was meant to end the fighting over the breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Watch more on push for peace »

However Saakashvili, flanked by the leaders of Lithuania, Poland, Estonia and Latvia in a media briefing early Wednesday, said Russian tanks were attacking and "rampaging" through the Georgian town of Gori despite the cease-fire.

However journalists in Gori, the birthplace of former Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, said they had seen no Russian tanks. Residents there told the journalists they had earlier seen "some," but not in large numbers.

A Russian military official said its forces were at an abandoned Georgian artillery base near Gori, but not inside the town itself. Watch more on battle-ravaged South Ossetia »

"I tell you with full responsibility that there are no Russian tanks in Gori today and there is no reason to be," because Gori authorities have fled the city, said General Anatoly Nogovitsyn, deputy chief of the Russian General Staff.

Nogovitsyn said the conflict had killed 74 Russian troops, wounded 171 and left 19 missing in action. Officials have estimated at least 2,000 civilians were killed in South Ossetia.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov called for international observers to help ensure peace and "prevent any aggressive ambitions on the part of the Georgian leadership." Watch more from the frontline »

Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus said an international force would be the only way to stop violence and ensure Georgia's territorial integrity.

"Let the world finally wake up and take the action and provide the real security for the region," Adamkus said. Interactive map: See how far the Russians advanced »

Fighting has raged since Thursday when Georgia launched its crackdown on separatist fighters in autonomous South Ossetia, where most people have long supported independence or reunification with neighboring North Ossetia -- a territory within Russia.


Russia sent its tanks into South Ossetia on Friday, saying it needed to protect Russian citizens living in the enclave, and quickly pushed back the Georgian forces. Russian forces also moved into Abkhazia, another breakaway Georgian region.

Russia called a halt Tuesday to its military incursion, insisting it had been aimed at stopping Georgian military actions against its peacekeepers and citizens in the breakaway regions.
 
I say its time to kick some Russian pansy asses. And start with Putin. Oh, and where the hell is NATO? :cool:

what, are you a islamic fundametalist? attacking georgia is nessicary for the removemnt of islamic terriost. a laicistic state is better
 
Putin is ex KGB and would tap Bush out in about a nano-second.
But like a lot of you gun tooting rednecks, ya can't do shit without you gun you mental/physical midgets
 
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