The 2004 flare-up of the Georgian Army charging up a hill where Ossetian rebels were entrenched When
Mikheil Saakashvili was elected president in 2004, his goal was to return the breakaway regions of
Georgia to central control. Following the success in
Adjara, President Mikheil Saakashvili's government turned their attention to South Ossetia. In June, Georgia shut down the Ergneti market to prevent the flow of contraband goods, regain the costums revenue and financially weaken the Ossetian separatist government which was relying on smuggling. At the same time, Georgia focused on supporting Ossetian activists like
Fagu inspired by the Georgian
Kmara to set the stage for the "Ossetian Revolution" against the corrupt secessionist government. Tensions caused by anti-smuggling campaign soon led to the military hostilities. Georgia's regional administration began to restore the alternative road to
Didi Liakhvi. The next day around 50 Georgian peacekeepers were disarmed and detained by the South Ossetian militias. The Georgian peacekeepers captured were all released on 9 July, with three exceptions. On 11 July 2004, Georgian president Saakashvili said the "crisis in South Ossetia is not a problem between Georgians and Ossetians. This is a problem between Georgia and Russia." On 5 August 2004, Russian
State Duma issued an official statement concerning the aggravation of situation around South Ossetia and Abkhazia in connection "with political actions of Georgian authorities". The statement warned that Russia could get involved in the conflict and would take "appropriate actions in case the lives of Russian citizens were jeopardized". Hundreds of Russian volunteers, mainly
Cossacks, stated their readiness to "protect the people of South Ossetia" should the conflict escalate any further. The tensions increased on the night of 10–11 August, when Georgian and South Ossetian villages in the area north of Tskhinvali came under fire and civilians were injured. Georgian and South Ossetian members of the JPFK are said to have been involved in the exchange of fire. On 13 August, Georgian Prime Minister
Zurab Zhvania and
de facto South Ossetian President
Eduard Kokoity agreed on a ceasefire, which was breached multiple times by both sides. During the tensions in July and August, 17 Georgians and 5 Ossetians were killed. In emergency sessions of the JCC on 17 and 18 August in Tbilisi and Tskhinvali, the sides debated complex ceasefire proposals and demilitarization projects. At the same time, they expected fighting to resume and used the truce to improve their military positions and strengthen defences. A ceasefire agreement was reached on 19 August. At a high-level meeting between Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania and South Ossetian leader Eduard Kokoity on 5 November in
Sochi, Russia, an agreement on demilitarization of the conflict zone was reached. Some exchange of fire continued in the zone of conflict after the ceasefire, apparently primarily initiated by the Ossetian side.
New peace efforts Saakashvili presented a new vision for resolving the South Ossetian conflict at the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) session in
Strasbourg, on 26 January 2005. His proposal included broader forms of autonomy, including a constitutional guarantee of free and directly elected local self-governance. Saakashvili stated that South Ossetia's parliament would have control over issues such as culture, education, social policy, economic policy, public order, organization of local self-governance and environmental protection. At the same time South Ossetia would have a voice in the national structures of government as well, with a constitutional guarantee of representation in the judicial and constitutional-judicial branches and in the Parliament. Georgia would commit to improving the economic and social conditions of South Ossetian inhabitants. Saakashvili proposed a transitional 3-year conflict resolution period, during which time mixed Georgian and Ossetian police forces, under the guidance and auspices of international organizations, would be established and Ossetian forces would gradually be integrated into a united Georgian Armed Force. Saakashvili also said that the international community should play a more significant and visible role in solving this conflict. Zhvania's premature death in February 2005 was a setback in the conflict resolution.
2006 attack on a Georgian helicopter On 3 September 2006, the South Ossetian forces opened fire at a Georgian
MI-8 helicopter carrying Defense Minister of Georgia,
Irakli Okruashvili, when it flew over the separatist-held territory. It landed safely in Georgian government-controlled territory. Although the South Ossetian authorities reported that the Georgian helicopter had entered their air space and fired shots at the ground, the Georgians denied the charge that shots had come from the helicopter. The South Ossetian officials confirmed their troops were responsible for the attack, but denied the claim that the aircraft was targeted because of prior intelligence that Okruashvili was on board. "We are not interested in having either Okruashvili or [Georgian president Mikheil] Saakashvili killed, as they are helping us to achieve independence," declared South Ossetian Interior minister
Mikhail Mindzayev.
2006 October incident On 31 October 2006, the South Ossetian police reported a skirmish in the
Java, Georgia district, in which they killed a group of 4 men. The weapons seized from the group included assault rifles, guns, grenade launchers, grenades and explosive devices. Other items found in the militants' possession included extremist
Wahhabi literature, maps of Java district and sets of Russian peacekeeping uniforms. Those findings led the South Ossetian authorities to conclude that the militants were planning to carry out acts of sabotage and terrorist attacks. The South Ossetian authorities identified the men as
Chechens from Georgia's
Pankisi Gorge. South Ossetia accused Georgia of hiring the Chechen mercenaries to carry out terrorist attacks in the region. In the areas under Georgia's control, the Ossetian opposition organized rival polls electing
Dmitry Sanakoyev as an alternative president and voted for negotiations with Georgia on a future federal agreement. The pro-Georgian government was never able to draw significant support away from the separatist authorities.
Georgia's new initiative On 29 March 2007, the Russian Foreign Ministry warned in a statement that Tbilisi's plan to set up a temporary administrative unit in the part of breakaway South Ossetia would "shatter an already fragile situation". On 10 May 2007,
Dmitry Sanakoyev was appointed as head of the
Provisional Administrative Entity of South Ossetia by the
President of Georgia. The next day, Sanakoyev addressed the
Parliament of Georgia, outlining his vision of the conflict resolution plan. In response the South Ossetian separatists enforced mass blockade of Georgian villages in the conflict zone and Kokoity demanded the withdrawal of Georgian special-task troops and South Ossetia's interim government headed by "alternative president" Dmitry Sanakoyev. On 24 July 2007, Tbilisi held its first state commission to define South Ossetia's status within the Georgian state. Chaired by Georgian Prime Minister
Zurab Noghaideli, the commission included Georgian parliamentarians, representatives of the Ossetian community in Georgia and representatives of several Georgian human rights organisations. The talks were held with Sanakoyev's administration. Sanakoyev's supporters launched a campaign against Kokoity named "Kokoity Fandarast" ("Goodbye Kokoity" in
Ossetian language).
Tsitelubani missile incident 2007 On 6 August 2007, a missile landed, but did not explode, in the village of
Tsitelubani, some from Tbilisi. Georgian officials said that Russian attack aircraft, an
SU-24 Fencer, violated its airspace and fired
Raduga Kh-58 anti-radar tactically guided missile. Russia denied the allegations. The group of defense specialists from the
United States,
Sweden,
Latvia and
Lithuania stated late on 15 August that the plane flew from Russian to Georgian airspace and back three times. ==Events in 2008==