Talk:14th Army involvement in Transnistria

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I like Mauco's idea (Transnistria talk page) to include in the article the involvement of cossacks in the fight for Transnistrian independence. Afterwards we can change the title of article. I am requesting your opinion - is O.K. to add info about the cossacks here?--MariusM 23:09, 23 September 2006 (UTC)

Well they weren'te really part of the 14th army. Maybe that information should go in the main War of Transnistria section.TSO1D 00:54, 24 September 2006 (UTC)
Agree. Here's how we can do it: Tie the two together by having a brief (one sentence or less) mention of Cossacks in this article, with a blue link that doesn't go to Cossacks but to a section in the War of Transnistria article where we can have one or two paragraphs, under a separate subheader, which deals with Cossack involvement. Just a suggestion... - Mauco 16:13, 24 September 2006 (UTC)

Contents

[edit] the Name

Regarding the reverted name, I have never been satisfied with the "Trans-Dniester Moldovan Republic" and I am happy to see that it is falling out of favor with others as well. The most authoritative academic work on the creation of the statelet, The Moldovans by Charles King, uses the name "Dniester Moldovan Republic" as does the US State Department now (see: http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2005/61664.htm). I would suggest we use that in this article as well, but for the sake of consistency within wikipedia it might be better to use the stated preference of the PMR government: Pridnestrovskaya Moldavskaya Respublika or Pridnestrovian Moldovan Republic. Whatever the final decision is, I vote we toss the "trans-" from the official title. Jamason 14:46, 24 September 2006 (UTC)

Some of us have already had this discussion before, on the Talk page of the main Transnistria article (now archived). We looked at how other country pages did it on Wikipedia. We came to the conclusion that we should keep Transnistria as the general moniker, and that we can also use Pridnestrovie (although we rarely do so) as the secondary term. The abbreviation should always be PMR (not TMR, DMR, or anything else). If you want to refer to the offical entity, rather than the geographical area, you may also do so by saying Pridnestrovskaya Moldavskaya Respublika or Pridnestrovian Moldovan Republic. This is now our Wikipedia "housestyle" and should be applied consistently. However, outside of Wikipedia I also talked to Edward Lucas about it (journalist from The Economist and he explained to me why they have a different housestyle (they use Transdniestria in order to avoid the "Nistru" part which is offensive to the majority of the population; ethnic Ukrainians and ethnic Russians). Anyway, since we have already had this discussion, we should not change it now, please. And if we change it in the future, it should we Wiki-wide and not just in this particular article. - Mauco 16:10, 24 September 2006 (UTC)

[edit] 14th army today

I realize that this is only a draft, and that we still have a long way to go. But I want to mention this sentence "Since the end of the conflict, the 14th Army has remained in the region as a peacekeeping force." My impression was that the 14th army got disbanded and that the troops which are there are now there under a different name. We would also need to clarify the reduction in troop strength which is down to <1500 (from, what, around 10,000 or more back then? Facts?) and have a link to Joint Control Commission so we give the historic continuity, all of which will be helpful to others who use this resource for their research. - Mauco 16:33, 24 September 2006 (UTC)

I completely agree. I also thought about pointing out that Moldova has never accepted their peacekeeping role or their presence, but I cannot give sources for this (if my impression is indeed accurate). Unfortunately, my familiarity with developments drops off precipitously after about mid-1992 so someone else is going to have to make those edits. Jamason 16:42, 24 September 2006 (UTC)
Certainly. However, the peacekeepers (under Joint Control Commission) are there with Moldovan agreement. This was the 1992 Boris Yeltsin - Mircea Snegur ceasefire, which is an official document and can be sourced. It is even online (don't have the link here, but it can be found). I think that the confusion stems from the fact that Moldova objects to other Russian troops which are not peacekeepers. Currently there are a little under 1500 Russian troops in Transnistria, and only half of those - or 750 - are assigned to peacekeeping (with an average of 385 on active duty at any given time). The other half are guarding the Kolbasna weapons and ammo dump. I think that these are the troops which Moldova objects most vehemently to, and it is possible that the 1992 agreement does not cover these troops. With regards to the peacekeepers they are they under an agreement with Moldova. The issue gets clouded because whenever Moldova and the US State Department talks about it, they lump "Russian troops" under one category, but in this contemporary history it is useful to distinguish between the troops which are there as per the agreement with Moldova and then the troops which are not. Politicians rarely do that, but we should, for accuracy. OSCE, on the other hand, makes this distinction. They are not very loud about it, so you have to look closely, but they are aware of the situation and know the facts on the ground. If you need specialized info which is not readily available I can help because I have some friends who work at the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe. - Mauco 17:00, 24 September 2006 (UTC)
Another source is the book "ДНЕСТРОВСКИЙ РАЗЛОМ" which is quite detailed and covers events from pre-independence until 2000 / 2001. It is onesided (in the sense that Moldova is portrayed as the bad guy, and PMR can do no wrong) but we here know enough about this so that we can add from other sources to get a fuller picture. Meanwhile, the strength of ДНЕСТРОВСКИЙ РАЗЛОМ is that it has a lot of first-hand detail not found anywhere else. It is available here: http://www.olvia.idknet.com/razlom/razlom.htm - Mauco 03:54, 25 September 2006 (UTC)
Moreover, a Russian source about the 14th army's involvement in this war is "General Lebed – Russian Enigma", Vladimir Polushin, Vneshtorgizdat Publishing House, 1996. - Mauco 02:55, 26 September 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Romanian arms shipments / Air bombings

It would be extremely interesting to see, from our sources, in what way any 14th Army involvement might have been triggered by the escalation of the Moldovan paramilitaries' activities; if any. It will require some close correlation of the dates. If this theory can be substantiated, the two keys events to look for would be the stream of arms shipments supplied by Romania (which was constant, from the very beginning. This was acknowledged in August 2006 by the foreign minister of Romania) followed by Moldovan use of aircraft in attacks on Bender and attacks on 14th Army installations in Transnistria. - Mauco 03:03, 26 September 2006 (UTC)

[edit] History of 14th Guards Army

The management of 10-th Guards shooting case generated in the autumn of 1942, Supervised over armies at clearing Odessa (in structure of 5-th shock army), in fights for Budapest (in structure of 46-th army), and has finished Great Domestic war in structure of 46-th Armies of 2-nd Ukrainian front in fights for the Vein, in Австрии.31 After end of Great Domestic war management of 10-th Guards The Budapest shooting case carried out a management of armies in structure of Odessa Military district, and after association of the Odessa and Taurian militarian округовхх was It is developed in management of 14-th Guards общевойсковой armies. On the beginning 1991 management of 14-th гв. ОА, besides formations of " the army complete set ", United 59-th Guards Краматорскую and 180-th Kiev мотостредковую divisions, Deployed in Tiraspol (Moldavian ССР) and Belgorod (the Odessa region УССР) accordingly. For November, 19th, 1990 14-th гв. ОА had 229 tanks, 305 БМП and БТ