As Russian troops pounded through Georgia last week, the Kremlin and its allies repeatedly pointed to one justification above all others: The Georgian military had destroyed the city of Tskhinvali. They said the physical damage to the city in the breakaway province of South Ossetia was comparable to Stalingrad, and the killings -- they claimed more than 2,000 dead -- to genocide. That explanation -- that Russians were saving South Ossetians from annihilation -- undergirded Moscow's rationale for the invasion. But how bad was it, really? Three American reporters who traveled to the city over the weekend filed varying reports on the depth of devastation. Here are excerpts of what they found. SCALE OF DESTRUCTION NOT IN QUESTION - NUMBER OF DEAD IS
By PETER FINN • Washington Post
The war here cut a swath of destruction, severely damaging many homes and apartment buildings.
Gaping holes scar five-story blocks of apartments, the detritus of what was once ordinary life blown onto shattered balconies.
In one neighborhood, along Telman Street, house after crumpled house was a scorched shell, bricks piled high in basements exposed to the sunlight. The area is about 200 yards from destroyed separatist government buildings, an acknowledged target of Georgian forces.
A school, a library and a kindergarten were blackened and pockmarked from small-arms fire, as were the houses around them.
At certain moments, in certain places, the smell of rotting corpses was in the air.
The scale of the destruction is undeniable; some streets summon iconic images of Stalingrad during World War II or Grozny, the capital of Chechnya, which was leveled in two wars between Russian troops and Chechen separatists.
But the number of dead here remains in dispute. When challenged on the 2,100 figure by reporters, who cited statements by medical workers and human rights groups that there was no evidence of such a high death toll, South Ossetia's Minister of Interior Mikhail Minsayev said people quickly buried the dead in their yards or took the bodies to North Ossetia in Russia for burial.