Sochi agreement
The Sochi agreement (also known as the Dagomys Agreements (
South Ossetia agreement
Russia brokered a ceasefire and negotiated the Agreement in 1992. The agreement primarily established a cease-fire between both the Georgian and South Ossetian forces, but it also defined a zone of conflict around the South Ossetian capital of Tskhinvali and established a security corridor along the border of the as yet unrecognized South Ossetian territories. The Agreement also created a Joint Control Commission and a peacekeeping body, the Joint Peacekeeping Forces group (JPKF). The JPKF was put under Russian command and was composed of peacekeepers from Georgia,
Abkhazia agreement
Once again, a Russian brokered agreement in 1993, the Agreement on a ceasefire in Abkhazia and On a Mechanism To Ensure Its Observance, allowed for a moratorium on the use of force, the withdrawal of conflicting parties from the warzone within fifteen days, establishing a Russian-Georgian-Abkhaz control group to monitor the ceasefire, the return of the
A further Agreement on a Cease-fire and Separation of Forces, also known as the 1994 Moscow Agreement, was agreed the following year.
Once again, on March 6–7, 2003,
Other Sochi summits
In 2003, Russian President Vladimir Putin met Georgian President Shevardnadze and Abkhazian PM Gennady Gagulia and set in motion a Sochi process that sought to create a Georgian-Russian-Abkhaz working groups on
In 2008,
See also
- Russian–Turkish memorandum, about the 2019 Turkish offensive into Syria
References
- ^ "South Ossetia". Freedom House: Freedom in the World. Freedom House. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
- ISBN 1-899548-06-8.
- ^ Personal Representative of the CSCE Chairman-in-Office for Georgia (November 1992), "17-CSO/Journal No. 2, Annex 2", Seventeenth CSO Meeting, Annex 2, The Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe, retrieved 2013-11-05
- ISBN 978-0-7923-2593-2. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
- ^ "Abkhazia: Statement by the National Security Council of Georgia (S/2003/569)", reliefweb: Updates (Report from the UN Security Council), ReliefWeb, 2003-05-23, retrieved 2013-11-05
- ^ "S/Res/1494 (2003)", United Nations Security Council, United Nations, 2003-07-30, retrieved 2013-11-05
- ^ a b Socor, Vladimir. "Eurasia Daily Monitor | The Jamestown Foundation". Jamestown.org. Archived from the original on October 19, 2006. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
- ^ Socor, Vladimir. "Eurasia Daily Monitor | The Jamestown Foundation". Jamestown.org. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
- ^ "WPR Article | Sochi Summit Fails to Solve U.S.-Russian Missile Defense Dispute". Worldpoliticsreview.com. Retrieved 2013-11-05.