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  • Cheapening Peacekeeping

    CHEAPENING PEACEKEEPING
    By Alexander Golts

    The Moscow Times, Russia
    June 6 2006

    No good deed goes unpunished, as they say. For more than 10 years,
    Russian peacekeeping troops have prevented the renewal of hostilities
    in the self-proclaimed republics of South Ossetia, Abkhazia and
    Transdnestr. Now we are hearing calls for them to withdraw. Belgian
    Foreign Minister Karel De Gucht has said that the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe, which he chairs, is prepared to
    allocate up to 10 million euros ($12.9 million) to cover the removal of
    Russian troops from Transdnestr. Georgian lawmakers have threatened to
    declare the mission in South Ossetia illegal. And Ukrainian Defense
    Minister Anatoly Gritsenko has said that GUAM -- an alliance that
    includes Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Moldova -- should develop
    its own peacekeeping force. Considering that the hot spots in the
    Commonwealth of Independent States (apart from Nagorno-Karabakh)
    are all monitored by Russian troops, Gritsenko's comments amount to
    a call for their withdrawal.

    Russian leaders have responded with righteous indignation. "Our
    peacekeepers are a bone in the throat of one side in these conflicts,"
    Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov said recently. "Endless provocations
    and dirty tricks have been directed against the peacekeepers. I have
    spoken about this many times in both South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Our
    soldiers will carry out their mandate until political solutions and
    agreements are in place."

    Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov maintains that the attacks on
    peacekeepers in South Ossetia are the result of Tbilisi's intention to
    resort to force to resolve the conflict there. Top Russian officials
    insist that the peacekeeping missions can legally remain in Georgia and
    Moldova even against the will of the governments of these countries.

    Tbilisi and Chisinau consistently argue that the Russian military is
    using the peacekeepers to pursue its own interests in the region. The
    leaders of Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Transdnestr have repeatedly
    called for their self-proclaimed states to be absorbed into the
    Russian Federation. South Ossetian leader Eduard Kokoity has even
    taken his case to the Russian Constitutional Court.

    For its part, Moscow has adopted a provocative stance. A Foreign
    Ministry spokesman has observed that, where Georgia is concerned,
    only negotiations can make this a reality, and that the South Ossetian
    position was based on the right of national self-determination. This
    when Russia has been handing out passports to South Ossetian
    residents for years. Passions on both sides have reached the point
    where missions originally intended to prevent armed conflict could
    lead to the outbreak of war.

    All of these self-proclaimed republics appeared as the result
    of conflicts initiated by the leaders of newly minted Soviet
    successor states. They sought to secure power with victorious wars
    that inevitably devolved into the murder of civilians, widespread
    atrocities and defeat. Russian peacekeepers were deployed to separate
    the warring factions and to stop the killing.

    Regulation of the conflicts did not follow, however, because the
    parties involved did not try to reconcile. The self-proclaimed
    republics believed the peacekeepers had been sent in to preserve
    their independence. Tbilisi and Chisinau took the opportunity to
    accuse Russia of violating their territorial integrity. In the CIS,
    reconciliation efforts never go anywhere, in large part because of
    the position adopted by Moscow. President Vladimir Putin was telling
    the truth when he said recently that Russia had no intention of
    annexing neighboring territories. Moscow is simply exploiting existing
    conflicts because before these countries can integrate into European
    institutions they must settle their internal disputes, so the best
    way to keep them out of the European Union and NATO is to keep those
    conflicts simmering.

    Moscow feels no obligation to influence the leaders of these
    republics to push them toward a compromise. On the contrary, the
    Kremlin's actions have created the illusion that Russian guns will
    always protect the status quo in these would-be states. Abkhazia,
    Transdnestr and South Ossetia have turned into criminal-controlled
    enclaves, and Georgia and Moldova have appealed to the international
    community for help to secure the removal of Russian peacekeepers from
    their territory.

    The Russian peacekeeping experience offers an important lesson:
    Such missions can only succeed when they are disinterested. When a
    country such as Russia sends its peacekeepers into conflict zones, its
    goal must be to prevent bloodshed, not to pursue ulterior political
    motives. Moscow has given in to this temptation, and in so doing has
    cheapened a noble undertaking.

    Alexander Golts is deputy editor of the online newspaper Yezhednevny
    Zhurnal.
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