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Georgia Vs. Russia:
Fanning the Flames
By Eric Walberg
Al-Jazeerah & ccun.org, March 8, 2010
Will there be another war in the Caucasus? This is a
smoldering issue on more than one front, finds Eric Walberg, in the first of
a two-part analysis of the spectre of conflict in this crucial crossroads
With the collapse of the Soviet Union, the world expected a
new era of peace and disarmament. But what happened? Instead of diminishing,
US and NATO presence throughout Europe, the Persian Gulf, Afghanistan and
Central Asia rapidly increased, and the world experienced one war after
another -- in the Caucasus, Yugoslavia , Iraq and Afghanistan , each one
hotter and more horrible than the last. And we are far from seeing the end
to the savagery now unleashed by the anti-communist jinni.
Though a pokey backwater for the past millennium, the south Caucasus is now
a key battleground, the “critical strategic crossroads in 21st century
geopolitics”, writes analyst Rick Rozoff, the focus of ambitious energy
transit projects and a military corridor reaching from Western Europe to
East Asia, controlled (or not so “controlled”) from Washington and Brussel.
Surely peace in this vital region should be a paramount goal
for both Russia and the West, for their own reasons -- Russia because, well
because it is there and its cultural and economic links are vital to Russia
’s well being. The US, if only to benefit economically, since peace
everywhere is a boon to economic well being and logically should be blessed
by the world’s superpower, whether or not it is a benevolent one.
But this logic has been betrayed -- egregiously, in the case of US
abetting Georgia in its disastrous war against Russia in 2008, less
obviously in likely covert US and other involvement in Chechnya and its
neighbours, as well as in the Armenia-Azerbaijan stand-off over Nagorno
Karabakh. Topping the list in recent times are Abkhazia and
South Ossetia, where firebrand Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili struts
and threatens, running from one NATO gathering to another, embracing one US
military envoy after another, as he shakes his fist at his northern nemesis
and vows to retake his breakaway territories Abkhazia and South Ossetia, now
fully fledged republics. This pits a NATO hopeful against a NATO foe, and
despite the fact that NATO expressly forbids membership to any country with
disputed borders, it continues to vow that Georgia will soon be a full
member, a project that can only mean war with Russia. US
encouragement for Saakashvili in his failed 2008 war with Russia was, to put
it mildly, an embarrassment for the US and should be a warning to politely
distance itself from further abetting a dangerously unpredictable character.
Despite the likelihood that Saakashvili’s extreme pro-West policies will be
reversed by a future government, the US navy is conducting war exercises at
this very moment with Georgia in the Black Sea, and the Pentagon is
preparing to build three military bases in Georgia and dispatch of up to
25,000 US servicemen to the country by 2015. It seems the embarrassment is
also a “window of opportunity”, a chance to put facts on the ground which a
future government would find very difficult to change.
Georgia is a tempting morsel for other reasons. US special envoy to AfPak
Richard Holbrooke just last week visited Georgia to arrange transit of arms
to his killing fields via Georgia. Saakashvili offered Georgia’s Black Sea
ports Poti and Batumi as docks for military supply ships and the country’s
airports as refuelling points for cargo planes. “The route to Afghanistan is
already used extensively, because almost 80 per cent of cargo which is not
going through Pakistan is going through Georgia, and only 20 per cent
through Russia,” boasts Alexander Rondeli, president of the Georgian
Foundation for Security in International Studies.
Saakashvili is pursuing a propaganda campaign aiming to destabilise the
region through direct and indirect provocation of Russia and support of
terrorists with the tacit approval of Washington and Brussels. He has
launched a Russian-language TV station First Caucasus beamed into South
Ossetia, much like Reagan’s TV Marti set up in 1985 for Cubans. He has also
reached out to Abkhazians and Ossetians to try to convince them to subvert
their current governments and join Georgia. The idea,
according to analyst at the Strategic Cultural Foundation Nicolai Dimlevich,
is to foment instability throughout the Caucasus and in Transcaucasia and
then call for all the zones of conflict to be passed into UN, EU and/or NATO
hands for safekeeping, since Russia would be proven to be incapable of
ensuring the security of local populations. In this scenario, the US and
NATO “benefit” from war in the region, as it is an opportunity to weaken
Russia and extend control over the region. Terrifying thoughts, but
unfortunately perfectly “rational”. The failed war against
Russia in 2008 also left behind storm clouds in Saakashvili’s own Tbilisi ,
where opposition to his reckless political gambits has hardened. Even as
Saakashvili blusters, key Georgian opposition figures have been visiting
Moscow since late last year, disowning their president’s plans. “We are
prepared to receive those, who come not for fighting and trickery, but for
making some changes,” Russian Deputy Minister Gregory Karasin told reporters
in Geneva recently. Karasin quoted Georgian parliament’s ex-speaker, current
leader of the Democratic Movement-United Georgia, Nino Burjanadze: “When
Saakashvili made a decision to wage war in summer 2008, I am quoting her ‘he
intended to make Russia bend on its knees and to cause tension in relations
with Russia, but Saakashvili lost the war and put the country in a tragic
situation.’ We want to have open and pleasant relationship with Georgia.”
Former Georgian prime minister Zurab Noghaideli was received
by Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in December, the first time that
the Russian leader openly met with a Georgian opposition leader. He openly
advocates cooperation between his Movement for a Just Georgia and United
Russia, and has developed close ties with the Union of Georgians in Russia.
Noghaideli has repeatedly stated that without a radical change in Georgia’s
foreign policy priorities his country’s “destruction will continue”, warning
that “there is danger of Georgia’s further dismemberment” if Tbilisi’s
current course continues. “Saakashvili understands that his
rule is in danger, and therefore he is prepared to plunge the country into a
new war. He prefers to be a president banished from Georgia by Russia than
to be banished by his own people,” said Burjanadze, condemning the TV
station beamed into Ossetia which features a talk show hosted by the late
Chechen rebel leader Dzhokhar Dudayev’s widow. Giorgi Khaindrava, a former
Cabinet member and now an opposition leader, said. if the channel devotes
coverage to the insurgency in Russia’s north Caucasus, Putin may declare it
a terrorist threat and use force to shut it down. “This isn’t just fantasy.
It could happen.” The entire spectrum of Georgia’s
politicians agree. Conservative Party leader Kakha Kukava says, “ Russia
doesn’t have any strategic plan towards Georgia nowadays. It is in
Saakashvili’s interests to provoke Russia and attract international
attention to obtain support.” Even “some of the people close to President
Saakashvili may also agree, but they can’t say so openly because they’re
afraid of him,” asserts Noghaideli. Perhaps Saakashvili’s
bluster is just hot air. But the war exercises with the US and the planned
US bases aren’t. Nor is the fact that the south Caucasus has become a
transit route for drugs to Europe and Russia. Russian Federal Drug Control
Service head Viktor Ivanov said last week that the ports of Batumi and Poti
are “the main ones in drug trafficking, and the Georgian city of Kabuleti is
one of the key points of trafficking of Afghan heroin.” Only
Saakashvili seems to think it’s possible to reunite the two breakaway
regions with Georgia any time soon. For better or worse Abkhazia is ever
more securely tied to Russia , as confirmed by President Sergei Bagapsh’s
visit to Moscow last month to commemorate 200 years since Abkhazia was
absorbed into the Russian empire. Though not Moscow’s favourite in the 2004
elections, Bagapsh has agreed to establish a joint military ground force for
the next 49 years and to upgrade an existing Russian base at Gudauta, where
1,700 Russian troops are presently stationed. He also proposed that Abkhazia
join the Belarus, Russia and Kazakhstan Customs Union even though neither
Minsk nor Astana has recognised Abkhazia as a sovereign state. Ironically,
says analyst Sergei Markedonov, if even a half dozen European countries were
to recognise Abkhazia, “maybe Bagapsh would favour European integration.”
Carnegie Moscow Centre analyst Alexei Malashenko suspects that Turkey may
set things in motion. “Turkey is ready to establish special relations with
Abkhazia.” The mouse’s defeat in 2008 also was an important
incentive for Ukrainians to turn against their Orange revolutionaries last
month. Incumbent Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich is merely expressing
the will of the people when he dismisses any future move to join NATO and
tones down the anti-Russian rhetoric. When Saakashvili goes, a similar move
will surely take place in Georgia, as a future president tries to repair
relations with Russia, though -- hopes the Pentagon -- leaving by-then
existing US bases in place.
Eric Walberg can be reached at
http://ericwalberg.com/
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