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  • Georgia Tries To Recapture All Its Breakaway States: The CaucasianMe

    GEORGIA TRIES TO RECAPTURE ALL ITS BREAKAWAY STATES

    The Caucasian melting-pot heats up

    Le Monde diplomatique
    October 2004

    The school siege in Beslan, North Ossetia, demonstrated the Chechen
    resistance's resort to extreme terrorism and desire to spread conflict
    across the volatile Caucasus region. The region is already trapped
    in a war of decolonisation because of its strategic importance both
    to Russia and to the western powers.

    By Jean Radvanyi

    While Chechen fighters increase their violent raids into Dagestan,
    Ingushetia and North Ossetia, Georgia's young president, Mikhail
    Saakashvili, is struggling to regain control of South Ossetia and
    Abkhazia. His problems have suddenly opened up the possibility of a
    new war in the southern Caucasus.

    The region is not unfamiliar with territorial and nationalist
    conflicts, but these are now bursting out of their traditional borders
    and into other areas. The years of Russian repression in Chechnya that
    began under Boris Yeltsin have driven some elements of Chechen society
    to a murderous anger (1). Repeated disappearances and "purification"
    raids wiping out whole villages, or their male populations, have only
    increased the violence of the separatist resistance, which reached a
    new peak last month with the Beslan hostage crisis. There is as yet
    no final death count for the assault on a school full of children,
    teachers and parents that became a shoot-out between hostage takers,
    Russian special forces and armed locals.

    In reaction to this crime, Moscow announced that it would not hesitate
    to carry out preventative attacks on terrorist bases outside its own
    territory - something it had already done in Georgia in 2002. But
    Georgia is not the same place that it was then. Actively supported
    by the United States, Mikhail Saakashvili took over in November 2003
    after a wave of public demonstrations toppled Eduard Shevardnadze's
    government and changed the country's whole attitude. The new president
    managed to regain full control of Adzharia, south-western Georgia,
    without violence, leading him to hope that his legitimate campaign
    to reintegrate Georgia's other two secessionist provinces - Abkhazia
    in the northwest and South Ossetia in the centre-north - would be
    similarly successful.

    But it has not been easy. The combination of Georgia's problems and
    the Beslan events reminds us of just how explosive the Caucasian
    melting pot can be when heated. The stakes are raised enormously by
    the fact that Russia and the US have been vying for control of this
    region ever since the fall of the Soviet Union. Russia is determined
    to maintain the upper hand in its former fiefdoms, but the US wants
    more than just access to the substantial oil and gas reserves of the
    Caspian Sea: the Caucasus occupies a key position in its long-term
    strategy, located right between Russia and the Middle East.

    Presidents George Bush and Vladimir Putin can make all the grand
    declarations they like about working together to bring peace to the
    region; these mean nothing when their rivalry continues to prevent
    any of its many conflicts from being resolved. Dampened down rather
    than stamped out, these conflicts smoulder, severely threatening to
    the security of the whole region, from the central Ossetian axis out
    across the greater Caucasus.

    For Saakashvili, fighting corruption and bringing Georgia's breakaway
    provinces back into the national fold is a top priority. Three of the
    semi- autonomous regions, created under Stalin, that Georgia fought to
    retain in the wars of 1991-93 have evaded central government control
    ever since: Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Adzharia. Together they make
    up more than 22% of Georgia and have been turned into black holes,
    havens for trafficking: alcohol, tobacco, oil-based products, weapons,
    drugs. The smuggling boom created common interests that eclipsed the
    conflicts, leaving them frozen but not resolved. Illegal revenue
    became the principal resource not only of the secessionists, but
    of all parties, including both the Russian intervention forces and,
    according to several sources, Shevardnadze's own presidential clan.

    As soon as he was elected, Saakashvili set about ousting the ruler
    of Adzharia, Aslan Abashidze. Abashidze and his clan (he made his son
    mayor of the regional capital, Batumi) had been in charge of Adzharia
    since 1991. Abashidze had always accused the Georgian government of
    wanting to assassinate him and never visited its capital, Tbilisi,
    during his 12 years in power. But he never made an outright declaration
    of independence. Indeed, he came to occupy an important position
    in Georgia's political landscape, since his party became the second
    largest there.

    Shevardnadze and Abashidze came to a curious kind of
    understanding. Customs revenues from Sarpi, Georgia's main land
    border crossing with Turkey, and from the major oil conduit port
    at Batumi never reached central government, but part of the money
    did wind up in the pockets of Tbilisi grandees. This situation was
    problematic for Saakashvili since it had led Abashidze actively to
    support Shevardnadze during the October 2003 crisis: he attempted to
    save Shevardnadze's presidency through an electoral agreement.

    Aware that Abashidze was growing increasingly unpopular at home,
    Saakashvili began a destabilisation campaign in Adzharia this
    spring. Using similar tactics to those that had led to Shevardnadze's
    resignation in autumn 2003, he gave strong support to students and
    other activists demonstrating against Abashidze. Troop movements
    and blockades along the border combined with a partial blockade
    of Batumi's port to increase the tension. Some observers predicted
    outright war, with soldiers from the Russian base at Batumi intervening
    on Abashidze's side. Things came to a head in May, when the Adzhar
    authorities destroyed the two bridges linking Adzharia with the rest
    of Georgia. For the first time, this was an explicit declaration
    of independence.

    But most of the population were against secession. Though they have
    been Muslims since the Ottoman empire ruled the province (1517-1878),
    Adzhars consider themselves Georgians and are attached to the Georgian
    community. The prospect of a war of independence led to an uprising
    against Abashidze, who fled to Moscow. Adzharia rejoined Georgia on a
    wave of public euphoria, its people only too glad to put the years of
    despotism behind them and return to what they saw as normality. The
    whole world congratulated Georgia on this bloodless victory.

    A buoyant Saakashvili, determined not to rest on his laurels, announced
    his intention to reintegrate the other two breakaway provinces before
    the end of his first term as president. But that challenge has proved
    a good deal tougher.

    Abkhazia and South Ossetia both split from Georgia for a range of
    historical and geopolitical reasons. The Orthodox Ossetians provided
    Moscow with a crucial ally in the region during the 19th-century
    Caucasian wars. After the first world war the Bolsheviks sought to take
    advantage of the differences between Georgians and the populations
    of Abkhazia and Ossetia, strategically positioned on two of the main
    routes linking Russia and the Transcaucasian republics of Armenia,
    Azerbaijan and Georgia, which enjoyed a brief period of independence
    in 1918-21. During this period the Bolsheviks encouraged independence
    movements in the breakaway areas in order to weaken Tbilisi. Under
    Stalin, they were made into autonomous areas in a deliberate attempt
    to undermine any revival in Georgia's movement for independence from
    the Soviet Union.

    Abkhaz and Ossetians saw perestroika and its parade of sovereignties
    as an opportunity to affirm and extend their autonomy, compounded by
    Georgia's independence from Moscow in 1991. They received unfailing
    support from the Russian leadership, though for dubious reasons:
    the Russians had publicly to oppose the idea of secession for fear of
    losing their grip on breakaway areas within their own borders, Chechnya
    in particular. But at the same time, they supported secessionist
    movements in the former Soviet republics, from Moldova to Azerbaijan,
    judging that this would provide them with an invaluable tool for
    exerting pressure on these newly independent states.

    In Abkhazia, the Russians helped Cossacks and other north Caucasians to
    intervene on the Abkhaz side, while officially remaining neutral and
    even stepping in themselves at key moments, such as the major Abkhaz
    attack of October 1993, to save Shevardnadze's skin. This duplicitous
    behaviour continued throughout the ceasefire negotiations that gave
    Russia responsibility for most of the peacekeeping forces in both
    conflicts. Despite the Russians' obvious interests in the region,
    the United Nations and the Organisation for Security and Cooperation
    in Europe were happy to put them in charge.

    The Georgian authorities criticised these organisations' attitude and
    accused Moscow of seeking to maintain a stalemate. The anti-Russian
    campaign reached absurd proportions in the Georgian media, but its
    real purpose was to hide Tbilisi's own underhand tactics. Georgia's
    leaders never made any serious attempt to understand or to address
    the causes of discontent among the Abkhaz and Ossetians. Often they
    preferred simply to offer a distasteful justification for their rashly
    perpetrated injustices against these peoples: they were unfairly and
    incorrectly said to be recent immigrants.

    The hardline policies of both Shevardnadze and Zviad Gamsakhurdia,
    Georgia's nationalist first president, made major contributions to
    the radicalisation of the separatist movements. Gamsakhurdia's 1990
    dissolution of South Ossetian autonomy was interpreted as a declaration
    of war, and later army incursions frequently became looting parties.

    Abkhaz and Ossetians regard re-integration quite differently from
    their Adzhar neighbours. They are not Georgians and they do not trust
    Tbilisi. Moreover they have become well-integrated within the Russian
    economy over the past 12 years. Russian businessmen, including members
    of Moscow mayor Yuri Luzhkov's family, have bought up many of the
    hotels that made Abkhazia's fortune in Soviet times. More worryingly,
    an estimated 80% of Abkhaz have obtained Russian citizenship, creating
    an unprecedented situation. Though both Tbilisi and Moscow have
    rejected this option, the possibility of these provinces rejoining
    the Russian federation cannot be ignored, since their own leaders
    openly support it.

    But Saakashvili appears keen to break with his predecessors'
    nationalist posturing. In his address to the Georgian nation on 26
    May, he revived the idea of an asymmetrical federation, adding that
    he intended to give the South Ossetians in Georgia as much autonomy as
    their North Ossetian counterparts enjoy in Russia. But the new regime
    has also espoused some alarming, pseudo-mystical rhetoric. Along
    with the adoption of a new flag bearing five crosses, Saakashvili's
    government has made much of the fact that both Shevardnadze and
    Abashidze fled to Moscow on St George's day (conveniently, there
    are two St George's days in Georgia, one in November and one in
    May). This might just be colourful folklore if it weren't accompanied
    by aggressive predictions of future successes, to be achieved by war
    if necessary.

    The two autonomous republics on either side of the Caucasus range that
    forms Russia's southernmost border, South Ossetia and North Ossetia,
    constitute two crucial challenges for the Russian and Georgian
    states. The main routes across the mountains from Vladikavkaz (the
    North Ossetian capital) to Tbilisi pass through the republics, with
    the result that the region's largest black market trading centre is in
    South Ossetia. Here, at Ergneti, just outside the capital, Tskhinvali,
    goods from Russia, Georgia, Armenia and elsewhere, including drugs,
    light weapons and stolen cars, change hands illegally. North Ossetia
    has been home to Russia's military headquarters for its campaigns
    against Chechen separatists since Moscow sided with the Ossetians
    in a 1992 territorial spat (2) with neighbouring Ingushetia, forcing
    thousands of Ingush into exile. This explains why Chechen terrorists
    have so often targeted the republic (including Beslan).

    In late May 2004 Georgia decided to block access to the Ergneti market
    and the powder keg exploded. Though accompanied by sensible measures,
    such as flour and seed deliveries, this was a military intervention
    within a ceasefire zone, and could not but lead to an escalation in
    tension. Moreover it reminded Ossetians of other armed interventions
    they had suffered, such as that of 1920 under the first Georgian
    republic, or of 1991 under Gamsakhurdia, which had left hundreds dead
    and forced thousands to flee to North Ossetia.

    This summer there were men and weapons rushing in and villages bombed
    on either side. It took vocal appeals for prudence from the West and
    a Russian intercession force to restore a shaky peace at the end of
    August. Moscow and Tbilisi each accused the other of provoking the
    clashes, and Saakashvili demanded that an international conference
    be held to resolve the matter.

    This was the tense atmosphere into which the Chechens' bloody
    action at Beslan erupted. There is no convincing evidence of any
    link to al-Qaida, but nor is there any doubt that this act was
    part of a concerted effort to spread the Chechen conflict into
    neighbouring areas. Ingushetia was targeted in June and Dagestan in
    July. Vladikavkaz faces an even greater risk because the conflict
    between Ossetians and Ingush remains unresolved. Though some Ingush
    refugees have returned to their villages, they have often found their
    homes occupied by refugees from South Ossetia. The North Ossetian
    government has been placing them there since 1991. This cynical
    attempt to stake an ethnic claim to the disputed territory has only
    exacerbated the dispute.

    In the run-up to the October presidential election in Abkhazia
    (eventually won by the opposition candidate, Sergei Bagapsh) much
    depended on Tbilisi's strategy, both there and in South Ossetia. To
    regain control of the two republics, Saakashvili will need to earn
    their people's trust. Driving them out of their homelands by aggressive
    manoeuvring will only bring about a return to violence. But Moscow
    must shoulder equal responsibility. Its equivocal attitude towards the
    southern Caucasus is a woefully short-term strategy that is pushing
    Caucasian states into alliances, strategic as well as economic,
    with the US and Europe.

    Russia would do better to use its influence over the secessionist
    governments to get them back under Georgian sovereignty. But Moscow,
    blinkered by the same militarism that has made such a fiasco of the
    Chechen conflict, does not seem prepared to do that.

    The US and European stances are hardly more coherent. Washington
    has given a boost to the warmongers in the Tbilisi government by
    training and arming the Georgian military (small contingents of which
    are currently serving in Afghanistan and Iraq). And by refusing to
    criticise Russia's strategy in Chechnya, Americans and Europeans are
    shirking their responsibilities towards this highly volatile region.


    NOTES

    (1) The reports of the International Helsinki Federation for Human
    Rights are a good source of information.

    (2) The Ingush wanted to reclaim the district of Prigorodnyi, ceded
    to Ossetia in 1944 with the deportation of both Ingush and Chechens,
    and since absorbed into the eastern suburbs of Vladikavkaz.

    Translated by Gulliver Cragg

    http://MondeDiplo.com/2004/10/08ossetia
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