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  • Solana Blinks, Deeply

    SOLANA BLINKS, DEEPLY
    By Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Oct 11 2006

    The European Union's High Representative for Common Foreign and
    Security Policy, Javier Solana, opined in a European Parliament hearing
    that international recognition of Kosovo's independence from Serbia
    could set "a precedent" adversely affecting Georgia in Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia. With some trepidation Solana imagined, "We are trapped
    here.... President [Mikheil] Saakashvili is trapped; all of us are
    trapped in a double mechanism that may have good consequences for one,
    but not for the other" (RFE/RL Caucasus Report, October 6).

    This statement gratuitously bows to Russia's untenable, self-serving
    theory linking the conflict settlement in Kosovo to the post-Soviet
    conflicts. Given Solana's top position, this statement -- inadvertent
    or improvised as may be the case in a hearing -- is the strongest
    public support for Moscow's position from a Western official thus
    far. It undercuts U.S. policy and that of many old and new EU
    governments, which rule out any linkage between conflict resolution
    in Kosovo and in the post-Soviet conflicts. Those governments --
    and also Georgia, Moldova, and Azerbaijan, whose territories are
    the scene of conflicts -- point out that the Kosovo conflict differs
    profoundly in its nature from the post-Soviet "frozen" conflicts and
    that any outcome in Kosovo can have no bearing on eventual outcomes
    in Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Transnistria, or Karabakh.

    The timing of Solana's pronouncement is -- again, perhaps
    unintentionally -- as encouraging to Moscow as its content. The endgame
    seems very near in Kosovo. The United States and the European Union
    (the latter not without hesitation) are aiming for a solution in
    Kosovo by the end of this year, involving international recognition
    of Kosovo's right to independent statehood or at least a decisive
    and irreversible move toward such recognition.

    In the U.N. Security Council and at the OSCE, veto-wielding Russia
    is set for a grand tradeoff. Two options seem equally satisfactory
    to Moscow: It would accept Kosovo's independence from Serbia via
    referendum, if Western powers tacitly accept the secession by a
    similar scenario of one or more Russian-controlled territories from
    Georgia and/or Moldova. Or, alternatively, Russia could use its veto
    to support Serbia, block the Western-supported independence of Kosovo,
    and exploit such a success to re-enter Balkan politics in alliance
    with Serbian nationalism.

    A third option, at least as advantageous to Moscow, would be
    stalemate and persistent ambiguity on both Kosovo and the post-Soviet
    conflicts. Russia aims to manipulate the negotiating processes on
    both fronts, in no hurry to reach settlement on either, and leverage
    its influence for potential tradeoffs in both. If Kosovo festers
    unresolved, Russia will have its fifth "frozen" conflict, this one
    in the Balkans, to exploit from next year onward.

    Even the relatively moderate (compared to the ultras) Serbian
    nationalists currently in power are scurrying to gain Russia's
    support for the latter two scenarios. Thus, Serbian Minister of
    Foreign Affairs Vuk Draskovic is seconding Moscow in calling for an
    arms embargo against Georgia (Interfax, October 6).

    All three Russian scenarios are predicated on linking the negotiation
    processes and outcomes in the post-Soviet conflicts and Kosovo,
    falsely postulating the equivalency of all these conflicts and calling
    for equivalent solutions. Moscow insists that it wants a single,
    overarching conflict-resolution model, but it remains ambiguous
    and flexible about its choice of such a model. At the moment, it
    seems equally prepared to sacrifice Serb nationalist interests for a
    "precedent" that would advance the "right" of post-Soviet secession;
    or, alternatively, to short-change its post-Soviet secessionist
    clients by stalling the resolution in Kosovo with lip service to the
    "territorial integrity" principle.

    The United States and many other governments point out that each
    conflict has its own characteristics and is a case in itself,
    requiring specific solutions. In Kosovo, for example, the former
    titular state Serbia ethnically cleansed the Albanian population --
    a process that the West reversed. In Abkhazia or Karabakh, however,
    the local minority ethnically cleansed the majority population with
    external support -- a process that continues to this day with Russian
    support. While Kosovo was an internal conflict within the former
    Yugoslavia, the post-Soviet conflicts are inter-state conflicts
    pitting Russia against Moldova and Georgia and Armenia against
    Karabakh. Whereas the post-Soviet secessionist territories make no
    secret of their desire to join another country and have taken the
    citizenship of another country, Kosovo is headed for statehood of
    its own, with an explicit prohibition on joining another country.

    Thus, any "precedent" or linkage is ruled out. Russia, however --
    from President Vladimir Putin on down -- insists on linkage and
    "precedent." Solana could have underscored the major differences
    between these conflicts by aligning himself with the United States
    and many EU member countries on this issue. Instead, he seemed to
    succumb to Moscow's views in his European Parliament deposition.

    Solana has in the recent past displayed an uncertain knowledge of the
    post-Soviet "frozen" conflicts and an inclination to appease Moscow.

    Last year, he allowed himself to be maneuvered by Putin into meeting
    with the Abkhaz and South Ossetian secessionist leaders in Sochi.

    Earlier this year, in an interview with Moldova's officious daily
    newspaper, Solana completely mis-described the Transnistria conflict as
    one between right-bank and left-bank economic and political elites --
    an interpretation apparently designed to obscure Russia role in this
    inter-state conflict.
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