US hints at 'regime change'
2008-08-10 23:15
New York - The United States
suggested on Sunday that Russia was interested in "regime
change" in Georgia after Moscow rejected Tbilisi's offer of a
ceasefire in the separatist enclave of South Ossetia.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told US Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice that the president of Georgia Mikheil
Saakashvili "must go", the US ambassador to the United
Nations, Zalmay Khalilzad, told the Security Council.
Khalilzad then looked straight at Russian Ambassador Vitaly
Churkin and asked if Moscow was looking for "regime change".
"Is the goal of the Russian Federation to change the
leadership of Georgia?" he said.
Churkin did not directly address the question, but said
there are leaders who "become an obstacle".
"Sometimes those leaders need to contemplate how useful
they have become to their people," he told reporters later.
"Regime change is purely an American invention," he said.
"We're all for democracy in Georgia."
Russian troops took the capital of South Ossetia earlier
after a three-day battle as Georgian forces retreated and the
Tbilisi government offered a ceasefire and talks.
In Moscow, Lavrov said the departure of Saakashvili, who
was re-elected by popular vote early this year, was not a must
to solve the crisis but that Russia no longer saw him as a
partner.
Khalilzad told reporters the telephone call between Rice
and Lavrov was "disturbing", adding that the days of
overthrowing European governments by force were over.
Churkin insisted Russia was not out to take over South
Ossetia. "Let's state clearly that we are ready to put an end
to the war, that we will withdraw from South Ossetia, that we
will sign an agreement on non-use of force," he said.
The US envoy said he would introduce a UN resolution
condemning Moscow, even though Russia is a permanent council
member with the power to veto it.
He was meeting later with
British and French diplomats and other allies on the council.
The council has been unable to take any action in four
emergency meetings on the crisis in as many days due, though
the heated exchanges have been reminiscent of the Cold War.
'Genocide'
Georgian envoy Irakli Alasania told the Security Council
that Churkin's comments were all "Soviet propaganda" and said
Russia intended to repeat what it did in Chechnya.
Moscow plans to "erase Georgian statehood and exterminate
the Georgian people", he said. Churkin in turn accused the
Georgians of "genocide" and "ethnic cleansing".
Khalilzad said Russia was waging "terror" in Georgia.
"We must condemn Russia's military assault on the sovereign
state of Georgia ... including the targeting of civilians and
the campaign of terror against the Georgian population," he
said.
Khalilzad also accused Russia of preventing the withdrawal
of Georgian forces from South Ossetia to prolong the conflict
and prevent Georgia from laying down its arms.
"Since Russia is impeding Georgian forces from withdrawing,
rejecting a ceasefire and continuing to carry out military
attacks against civilian centres, its claims of a humanitarian
purpose clearly are not credible," Khalilzad said.
Churkin was furious that Khalilzad used the word "terror".
"This statement, ambassador, is completely unacceptable,
particularly from the lips of the permanent representative of a
country whose actions we are aware of, including with regard to
the civilian populations in Iraq and Afghanistan and Serbia,"
Churkin told the council.