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Armed Separatism Showcased In South Ossetia

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  • Armed Separatism Showcased In South Ossetia

    ARMED SEPARATISM SHOWCASED IN SOUTH OSSETIA
    By Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    The Jamestown Foundation
    Sept 22 2005

    On September 19-20 in Tskhinvali, South Ossetian authorities led
    celebrations of the 15th anniversary of the declaration of secession
    from Georgia. Although the September 20, 1990, declaration and some
    subsequent documents speak of "independence" and a "sovereign state,"
    the authorities in practice seek outright annexation to Russia via
    North Ossetia. A giant billboard just outside Tskhinvali, showing
    Russian President Vladimir Putin with the caption, "Our President,"
    in effect advertised that program during the festivities.

    Yevgeny Trofimov (chairman of the Russian Duma's Nationalities
    Committee), Konstantin Zatulin (who is also director of the
    government's Institute on CIS Affairs), and other Duma deputies
    attended the celebration, along with the Abkhaz de facto leader
    Sergei Bagapsh (arriving directly from Moscow) and delegations from
    Transnistria and Karabakh. These delegations, as well as guests from
    North Ossetia, crossed the Russia-Georgia border unlawfully through
    the Roki tunnel, which is controlled by Russian troops.

    Ossetian troops with some 20 tanks and other armored vehicles,
    anti-aircraft installations, and 10 infantry battalions took part
    in a military parade in Tskhinvali's central Stalin Street and
    Stalin Square. The "defense ministers" of South Ossetia and Abkhazia,
    Maj.-Generals Anatoly Barankevich and Sultan Sosnaliev -- both seconded
    by the Russian military to these posts -- attended the parade.

    The Russian "peacekeeping" commander, Maj.-General Marat Kulakhmetov,
    pre-notified Tbilisi of some of the movements of those troops and
    hardware toward Tskhinvali and conceded that those movements were
    unlawful. However, his troops did nothing to stop this massive
    breach of multiple agreements among Russia, Georgia, South Ossetia,
    and the OSCE on force-reduction and demilitarization measures in the
    "security zone."

    South Ossetia's de facto leader Eduard Kokoiti signed with Bagapsh
    a "treaty" on friendship and cooperation between Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia -- the type of move intended to suggest that the two
    territories' secession from Georgia is irreversible: "Our celebration
    will demonstrate to the world that we are full-fledged democratic
    states." However, they made no secret of the shared goal for their
    territories to become eventually parts of Russia.

    Kokoiti signed an agreement with Russia's North Ossetian republic
    leader, Teimuraz Mansurov, to create a commission on "special
    relations" and draft a comprehensive agreement to that effect. The
    document proclaims the goal of "striving to preserve the unity of
    Ossetia." "There can be no other option than unification," Mansurov
    declared. In a similar vein, Kokoiti told the press conference, "We see
    our future only in a single political, economic, and cultural space
    with Ossetia and Russia." Kokoiti also made a speech on "Ossetian
    self-determination" in Russian. He and others at the celebration
    summarily dismissed Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili's offer
    of autonomy and devolution of powers to South Ossetia as a "publicity
    exercise for international consumption," thus avoiding discussion of
    the offer on its merits.

    Georgia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs lodged a protest with Russia's
    Ministry of Foreign Affairs over Mamsurov's actions in Tskhinvali.

    "Inasmuch as the Russian side is fully responsible for actions of the
    executive branch, Georgia regards the step taken by the head of North
    Ossetia as an unfriendly move by Russia that encourages separatism."

    Parliament chairwoman Nino Burjanadze in turn "ask[ed] the
    international community: Do we really need a peacekeeping force
    under whose nose the separatist authorities are staging military
    parades? A peacekeeping force that sits idly by while two separatist
    presidents are proffering threats?" The parliament's international
    affairs committee chairman, Kote Gabashvili, noted that Russia is
    now engaged in an ongoing annexation of South Ossetia after having
    supported their secession. The Georgian parliament is now drafting a
    resolution calling for basic changes to the "peacekeeping" operations
    in South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

    On September 21 in the evening, three projectiles were fired from
    grenade-launchers into Tskhinvali, injuring seven persons, most of
    whom were released from ambulatory care that same evening, Kulakhmetov
    announced. Both he and Russia's MFA statement did not blame any side
    for the incident. The festivities were not affected.

    Georgia's Defense Minister Irakli Okruashvili and parliamentary
    defense committee chairman Givi Targamadze -- who were visiting
    nearby Georgian villages that day --- rejected any suggestions that
    Georgians were responsible. They, as well as State Minister for
    Conflict Resolution Giorgi Khaindrava, noted that only Georgia's
    adversaries were interested in provoking such incidents. Saakashvili
    promised an investigation and declared that Tskhinvali residents'
    safety was "a matter of honor" to him.

    In his speeches on September 14 at the summit of world leaders in
    New York and on September 18 in Tbilisi, Saakashvili decried the
    "intensive annexation" of Abkhazia and South Ossetia "with direct
    support from outside," and vowed that Georgia would never accept such
    "despicable annexations" of parts of its territory.

    The Tskhinvali events demonstrated also the OSCE's irrelevance
    regarding South Ossetia. The organization has only five or six military
    observers, dual-based in Tbilisi and Tskhinvali, who are pathetically
    under equipped with transport and communications, and thus unable
    to detect most breaches of the agreements on force-reduction and
    demilitarization in the "security zone." The OSCE interprets its
    mandate as being confined to the "security zone" around Tskhinvali,
    which forms only a small part of South Ossetia's territory. The
    Mission declines to monitor Java, where Ossetian troops and their
    heavy weaponry are stationed for quick deployment in Tskhinvali.

    Politically, the Mission failed to react to the September 19
    demonstration of military force, just as it had failed in June
    2004 to react to the expedition of armed "volunteers" from Kuban,
    Abkhazia, and Transnistria to South Ossetia and their exercises
    with Ossetian troops. As custodian of the Helsinki Final Act and the
    Treaty on Conventional Forces in Europe, the OSCE would be obligated
    to respond at least declaratively to the ongoing annexation of
    Georgia's territories and the parades of CFE-banned combat hardware
    ("unaccounted-for treaty-limited equipment"). However, the OSCE
    Mission -- like the organization itself -- is hostage to Moscow's
    veto in Vienna and thus unable to act unable to act in Tskhinvali.

    (Rustavi-2 TV, Interfax, Russian TV Channel One, September 18-21)
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