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Georgians in Ukraine Fight Shadow War

Ukrainian soldiers carrying the coffin containing the body of Tomaz Sukhiashvili, a Kiev-loyal Georgian fighter. Gleb Garanich / Reuters

TBILISI, Georgia — The return of a Georgian fighter's body to his homeland from Ukraine was a grim reminder of how eastern Ukraine's conflict carries traces of a war of a quarter-century ago.

About 100 Georgian volunteers are fighting along with Ukrainian forces against Russia-backed separatist rebels, Georgian General Giorgi Kalandadze said Tuesday. Two are known to have died.

On the other side, fighters from the separatist Georgian region of Abkhazia reportedly have been battling alongside the Ukrainian rebels.

Soon after the Soviet Union disintegrated in 1991, war broke out in Abkhazia between Russian-supported separatists and Georgian forces. Georgian forces were eventually driven out of all but a small corner of Abkhazia, and that minor presence ended in the brief 2008 war between Georgia and Russia.

Abkhazia, in the view of all but Russia and a handful of other countries, is still nominally part of Georgia. But it is fully outside Georgian control and effectively either independent or a vassal of Russia.

In Georgia, resentment over the loss of Abkhazia is deep, and the death in Ukraine of volunteer Tamaz Sukhiashvili appeared to bolster Georgia's animosity toward Russia. Sukhiashvili, who would have turned 37 on Sunday, had taken part in the Georgian military's contingents in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"It is a huge pain to lose each Georgian, but I do understand Georgian patriots who are fighting against our enemies everywhere," Georgian parliament member Zakaria Kutsnashvili said Thursday.

In the view of some Ukrainian fighters, the Georgians are honoring Ukrainian sacrifices of a generation ago.

In the 1990s, "seven of our guys were killed fighting for Georgia," said Igor Mazur, head of the Kiev branch of the Ukrainian National Self-Defense, a nationalist grouping. "The Georgians are now repaying that debt from those events."

"We can understand those Georgians who telephone and tell us that they want to help us, because the Russians will find some reason to turn their aggression again to Georgia, or maybe Azerbaijan and Lithuania," he said.

And Sergei Urashka of Ukraine's Aidar battalion, a volunteer unit under command of the Ukrainian Defense Ministry, said the Georgians have been a strong asset.

"They help me to prepare my fighters, because they are more experienced. Some of them have been in four wars, or even more," he said.

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