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Georgia . . . On Russia's Mind

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  • Georgia . . . On Russia's Mind

    GEORGIA . . . ON RUSSIA'S MIND
    By Ariel Cohen

    Washington Times, DC
    Oct 19 2006

    Amid great power fretting over North Korea's nuclear test and
    continuing Iranian truculence against the West, Russia escalated its
    confrontation with the neighboring Georgia. The arrest of five Russian
    alleged intelligence officers two weeks ago was a pretext for Moscow
    to further escalate an already difficult relationship with Tbilisi,
    now affecting the 1 million Georgian Diaspora in Russia.

    Ethnic Georgians, including children, were loaded on cargo planes
    and expelled from Russia, citing their illegal immigration status.

    Prominent Georgian intellectuals, who are Russian citizens, are being
    harassed by the tax police. Georgian businesses in Moscow are singled
    out by law enforcement authorities. The handling of the crisis is
    threatening Russia's international standing as a responsible and
    constructive great power.

    Georgia may have overplayed its hand by arresting the military
    intelligence officers, whom it accused of sabotage, and not just
    expelling them quietly -- an acceptable modus operandi in such cases.

    In response, Moscow recalled its ambassador from Tbilisi, evacuated
    diplomats and their families and halted issuing visas to Georgian
    citizens. The Russian military forces stationed in Georgia have gone
    on high alert. Russia cut air and railroad links, and blocked money
    transfers from Georgians working in Russia, denying an important
    source of income for many Georgian families.

    Since Mikheil Saakashvili came to power in the Rose Revolution of
    2003, anti-Russian statements by Georgian leaders, a relentless
    push to evacuate Russian military bases (to which Russia has agreed
    previously), an attempt to join NATO, and opposition to Russian
    membership in the World Trade Organization, have caused the Putin
    administration to embargo the two key imports from Georgia. These
    are Borjomi mineral water and wine, much beloved in Russia.

    It did not end there. In September, South Ossetian separatists, who
    receive Russian military support, have fired on Georgian helicopter
    carrying the defense minister. This was a provocation, which, if
    successful, could have led to conflagration of hostilities in the
    small secessionist territory that belongs to Georgia. However, Russia
    made little secret of its desire to start a war in the Caucasus that
    would lead to a regime change in Tbilisi.

    There are regional and global reasons why Moscow is escalating the
    crisis over Georgia: c? To begin with, this is not the first time
    Russia is trying to stop NATO enlargement into the formerly Soviet
    territory. In 1999, Russia fulminated against the Baltic States' NATO
    membership. But at that time, Russia was extricating itself from the
    1998 economic crisis while a power struggle was afoot in Moscow to
    succeed President Boris Yeltsin. As energy prices were much lower
    in 1999, Western European countries supported the Baltic States'
    NATO bid despite Russian protests. However, today, Western Europe is
    increasingly energy-dependent on the Gazprom and so is taking Russian
    foreign-policy positions much more seriously.

    c? Second, the Kremlin is now buoyed by $250 billion in petrodollar
    reserves. These funds buy a lot of hardware for the Trans-Caucasus
    Military District and for pro-Russian separatists in Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia.

    c? Third, Russia is uneasy over the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan main export
    pipeline, which takes Azeri oil to the Mediterranean markets, and
    crosses Georgia but bypasses Russia. The Absheron-Erzurum gas pipeline
    will be coming online, bringing Azeri gas to Turkey and Europe. Gazprom
    is concerned that this gas pipeline may eventually allow export of
    Turkmenistan and Kazakhstani gas to Europe, circumventing Russia's
    pipeline network.

    If Georgia comes under the Russian sway, neighboring Azerbaijan
    and Armenia will feel the full weight of Russian presence. Leading
    foreign policy experts in Moscow believe Azerbaijan has not allocated
    enough oil patches to Russian companies and facilitated oil exports
    via Turkey instead of Russia, which may explain why Russia is leaning
    on Georgia so much.

    The Armenian opposition openly demands a more pro-Western and less
    pro-Russian policy, noting close ties with Moscow did not improve
    Armenia's abysmal living standard and did not allow it to receive
    international recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh's independence.

    A pro-Russian Georgia in the Collective Security Treaty Organization
    of the Commonwealth of Independent States would permit Russia and
    Iran to dominate Azerbaijan and Armenia, severely limiting the U.S.

    policy options there. Furthermore, such a development would put to
    rest U.S. ambitions in Central Asia and may cut off strategically
    important Kazakhstan from Western energy markets.

    Russia has warned repeatedly it will retaliate severely in case
    Kosovo is granted independence against the will of Serbia, a
    historic ally. Mr. Putin has called for imposition of the Kosovo
    criteria on separatist enclaves in the former Soviet Union, including
    Transnistria, which is a part of Moldova, Abkhazia, South Ossetia
    and Nagorno-Karabakh. Russia would enforce a referendum in these
    territories, and would recognize their independence, opening the door
    to their eventual incorporation in the Russian Federation. Moreover,
    such an approach would create dangerous precedents vis-a-vis the
    Crimea, where a majority of the population is pro-Russian; for
    Russian-speaking Eastern Ukraine; and even for predominantly Slavic
    Northern Kazakhstan.

    Violations and alternations of the existing borders of the former
    Soviet Union may generate severe tensions in Europe and open the
    Pandora's box of territorial claims and ethnically based border
    challenges there and elsewhere, for example in Iraq and Kurdistan.

    The United States today is preoccupied with major crises, such as
    Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran and North Korea. Russia is a key player in all
    these. Its true and real cooperation would be welcome, although so far
    it is not sufficient. It is vital for the future of the U.S.-Russian
    relations and for global security that Moscow behaves responsibly and
    constructively. Quickly defusing the Georgian crisis via diplomacy
    is a good place to start. Washington should encourage the European
    powers, the European Union and Turkey to become more engaged in
    diffusing the Georgian-Russian confrontation. It should also advise
    Georgia not to escalate rhetoric and performance vis-a-vis Russia
    unnecessarily. After all, a peaceful and prosperous Caucasus is in
    the Russian, Georgian and American interests.

    Ariel Cohen is senior research fellow in Russian and Eurasian studies
    and international energy security at the Heritage Foundation.
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