Gudauta
Gudauta (Georgian: გუდაუთა, [gudɑutʰɑ] (
Gudauta გუდაუთა, Гәдоуҭа, Гудаута Gwdowtha | |
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town | |
View of Gudauta's centre | |
Location of Gudauta within Abkhazia | |
Gudauta Location of Gudauta in Georgia | |
Coordinates: 43°06′7.16″N 40°37′29.28″E | |
Country | |
Partially recognized independent country | Abkhazia[1] |
District | Gudauta |
Population (2011)[2] | |
• Total | 8,514 |
Time zone | UTC+3 (MSK) |
Overview
Gudauta used to be home to a Soviet Air Defence Forces base, Bombora airfield, where the 171st Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment flew Su-15TMs until 1982. The 171st Fighter Aviation Regiment was then transferred to Anadyr Ugolny Airport, Chukotia Autonomous Okrug.[3] The 529th Fighter Aviation Regiment, flew Su-27 'Flankers' from the base in the last years of the Cold War.[4] This regiment was under the command of the 19th Army of the Air Defence Forces. Gudauta was a center of Abkhaz separatist resistance to Georgian government forces during the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict in 1992–1993.
Bombora airfield outside Gudauta later became home to a Soviet Airborne Forces unit, the 345th Independent Guards Airborne Regiment, later redesignated the 50th military base after the Soviet collapse, and then the 10th Independent Peacekeeping Airborne Regiment. The unit was subordinated directly to the Russian General Staff (earlier it used to be under the HQ of the Russian Airborne Forces). In 1999, its equipment includes 142 AIFV/APC (among them - 62 BMD-1 and 11 BMD-2); and 11 self- propelled artillery systems 2S9 "Nona-S".[5]
The base has always been a significant factor in the Abkhaz conflict. The Georgian side and many Western independent observers claim the Gudauta base provided principal military support to Abkhaz rebels during the war in 1992–1993. In September 1995, Georgia had to legitimize Russian leases of three bases in the country and the Gudauta base among them.
At a summit of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), in Istanbul in 1999, Russia agreed to shut down its base at Gudauta and to withdraw troops and equipment, pledging that henceforth it would be for the sole use of the CIS peacekeepers ("rehabilitation centre for peacekeeping troops"). However, Abkhaz authorities block OSCE inspection visits and no date is set for withdrawal from the base. Georgia still alleges that it is used to offer military support to the Abkhaz secessionists.
After the Russo-Georgian War, Russia recognized Abkhazia and signed with its government the treaty allowing Russia to keep its military base in Gudauta and reinforce it with T-62 tanks, light armored vehicles, S-300 air defense systems and several aircraft.[6]
The Gudauta base remains one of the main problems in complicated Russian-Georgian relations.
Etymology
Гәдоу-ҭа: Гәдоу is a mane of the river, ҭа is a locative suffix.
International relations
References
- Abkhazia is the subject of a territorial dispute between the Republic of Abkhazia and Georgia. The Republic of Abkhazia unilaterally declared independence on 23 July 1992, but Georgia continues to claim it as part of its own sovereign territory. Abkhazia has received formal recognition as an independent state from 7 out of 193 United Nations member states, 1 of which have subsequently withdrawn their recognition.
- (in Russian) Infos at ethno-kavkaz.narod.ru
- MIchael Holm, 171st Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO, accessed October 2011
- V.I. Feskov et al, 'The Soviet Army in the Years of the Cold War,' Tomsk, 2004
- CIPDD, The Army and Society in Georgia Archived 2009-01-06 at the Wayback Machine, October 1999
- Infos at en.rian.ru
- Infos at www.kineshemec.ru Archived 2014-12-05 at the Wayback Machine