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The original was posted on /r/sakartvelo by /u/DukeoftheCaucasus on 2023-08-07 19:27:02+00:00.
Given the fact that today marks 15 years since the august war and I’m a very political person, the one thing that’s been weighing on my mind is the Tagliavini report. It’s almost a given that in every discussion about the war someone is going to bring it up and that someone generally tends to be a pro-Russian person who clearly doesn’t understand the report. I think more needs to be done to address this and by that I mean two things.
- Combating misinformation surrounding the report’s contents, explaining that despite its “conclusion” a lot of, if not most of, the info presented is actively going against the Separatist/Russian position in critical ways, both from the timeline it presents to the facts it presents, particularly surrounding Russia’s casus belli for intervention and subsequent occupation.
- More to actually challenge the conclusion itself. While the report has generally fallen to the wayside, I don’t think there’s been enough attention given to exactly WHY the conclusion is wrong from major sources and institutions and this gives pro-Russian sources a free hand to continue acting as if it’s still valid.
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