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Sanction Watch: Russia Declares Georgia A Domestic Affair

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  • Sanction Watch: Russia Declares Georgia A Domestic Affair

    SANCTION WATCH: RUSSIA DECLARES GEORGIA A DOMESTIC AFFAIR
    Vladimir Solovyev; Dmitry Sidorov, Washington

    Kommersant, Russia
    Oct 4 2006

    The United States and European Union called on Russia yesterday to
    lift its sanctions against Georgia, saying that, now that the Russian
    officers arrested have been returned to Russia, the incident should
    be considered over. Russian officials responded that all measures
    against Tbilisi will remain in force and the West should not interfere
    in Russian-Georgian relations.

    Russia Responds

    Russia began a new diplomatic attack on Georgia yesterday. A draft
    resolution was introduced By Moscow in the UN Security Council to
    demand that the importance of the role of Russian peacekeepers in
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia be confirmed and Georgian actions against
    them condemned. The document also demands that Tbilisi "refrain from
    combative rhetoric and prevocational actions."

    Russia tried to use the United Nations to pressure Georgia last
    week as well. On Friday, a statement by the chairman of the Security
    Council was drafted that condemned Georgian authorities' treatment of
    the Russian officers. However, the United States blocked discussion
    of the statement. Russia persisted and the document was put up
    for an open vote in the Security Council a week later. Obviously,
    the resolution will fail because of an American veto. But Moscow is
    forcing Washington to show its support for Georgia openly.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov gave a special press conference
    yesterday on the Russian-Georgian conflict, at which he accused
    the West of provoking the current crisis. "The latest prank with
    the seizure of our officers took place right after NATO's decision
    to present Georgia with a plan for intensive cooperation and after
    [Georgian President] Mikhail Nikolaevich [Saakashvili's] visit to the
    U.S.," Lavrov observed. "That's how it was chronologically: the trip
    to Washington, the NATO decision, the taking of hostages."

    According to Lavorv, all of Georgia's recent aggressions against Russia
    were sanctioned by Saakashvili's Western protectors. "We repeatedly
    called the danger of dallying with the Saakashvili regime...

    to the attention of those who are supplying weapons to Georgia
    and who are not allowing a decision to be made in the UN Security
    Council," he said, and then went on to advise the West to stay out
    of Russian-Georgian relations, saying "I do not see any need to draw
    intermediaries into issues that concern Russian-Georgian relations.

    Third parties have already interfered and that had brought only harm."

    In a rebuke to the U.S., Lavrov announced that , in spite of the
    return of the Russian officers to their homeland, Russia does not
    intend to soften its position or cal off the sanctions brought against
    Georgia. "The Georgian leadership must understand that it cannot offend
    Russia while thousands of Georgian citizens are working and feeding
    their families here. You can't feed off of Russia and offend it,"
    Lavrov said.

    Lavrov's statement means that the punitive retaliatory measures brought
    by Moscow against Tbilisi will only become harsher. The Russian State
    Duma is expected to pass a special statement on Georgia before the
    end of this week that will be unprecedented in its harshness. A draft
    of that document made public by Duma deputy speaker Sergey Baburin
    reads that "Russia has the right to take measures of force in the
    event that anti-Russian actions by Georgian authorities continue."

    At the same time, the Russian Federal Migration Service has thrown
    all its efforts into blocking ay access to Russia by Georgian
    citizens. Deputy director of the service Mikhail Tyurkin reported
    that Russia is discussing the possibility of Belarus imposing a visa
    procedure for Georgia. There is a visa procedure between Russia and
    Georgia, but not between Georgia and Belarus. "That way," Tyurkin
    noted, "Georgian citizens arrive in Belarus, catch a train and come
    to Russia. We are discussing that problem and I think everything will
    be settled in the near future."

    Besides fighting Georgian illegal immigrations and imposing a transport
    blockade, Moscow has other sensitive means of pressuring Georgia. It
    can turn to the tried and true method of using energy by raising
    the prices electricity and natural gas to Georgia. Kommersant has
    also learned that Russia may reconsider the prices on a number of
    essential goods, such as grain, for Georgia.

    Their Advice

    Russia is turning up the pressure of Georgia just as the West
    is demanding that the new sanctions be lifted. U.S. Assistant
    Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Daniel Fried
    spoke recently about what Washington thinks of the Russian-Georgian
    conflict. At a press conference held immediately after the plane with
    the Russian officers released by Georgia reached Moscow, Fried stated
    that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had personally reached an
    agreement with the Georgian president and Russian foreign minister on
    their release. The American also hinted that the incident should now
    be considered finished. "Arrests on espionage charges have happened
    before in the world and will most likely happen again in the future.

    It is important not to let incidents like that get out of control,"
    he said.

    The European Union also tried to calm Russia down. European
    Commissioner for External Relations and European Neighborhood Policy
    Benita Ferrero-Waldner urged Moscow to call off its economic blockade
    of Georgia, saying that "sanctions are a path to nowhere." NATO has
    also taken Georgia's side. The NATO Parliamentary Assembly adopted a
    resolution supporting Georgia's effort to become a NATO member, saying
    that it "should be encouraged and supported. Membership in NATO should
    be open to those who show a commitment to the values of the alliance."

    The West's moral support has inspired Georgian authorities to keep up
    the fight. Tbilisi intends to appeal against about the closing off
    of air connections between Georgia and Russia to the International
    Civil Aviation Organization. "We are appealing a political decision
    that was made by the Russian leadership," reads a statement by the
    Gruzaeronavigatsia.

    Georgian politicians are trying to emphasize their victory in the
    standoff with Moscow. Konstantin Gabashvili, chairman of the Georgian
    parliament's committee on foreign relations, stated that the arrest
    of the Russian officers in Georgia will speed up the closure of
    Russian military bases in Georgia. "It is the failure of [Russian
    Defense Minister] Sergey Ivanov," he explained. "It seems he has
    very bad intelligence agents. This will affect his image, which has
    enormous meaning before the presidential elections." He attributed a
    diplomatic defeat to Lavrov as well, saying, "Georgia's advancement
    to an intensive dialog with NATO, the issue of financial support for
    that dialog from the U.S. Senate, UN resolutions - all of those are
    defeats. That is what the hysteria is related to."

    The Georgian Defense Ministry announced new rules yesterday for the
    transportation on Georgian territory of military cargo and personnel
    from the Russian base at Gyumri, Armenia. Now the transport of
    Russian military personnel is only possible after the Georgian Defense
    Ministry approves it. Thus, Tbilisi has risen to Moscow's challenge,
    and continues to move toward increasing tensions despite everything.
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