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Aris Kazinyan: "Own Game" Of Mikhail Saakashvili And Armenian Factor

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  • Aris Kazinyan: "Own Game" Of Mikhail Saakashvili And Armenian Factor

    ARIS KAZINYAN: "OWN GAME" OF MIKHAIL SAAKASHVILI AND ARMENIAN FACTOR

    Regnum, Russia
    Sept 9 2006

    Aris Kazinyan - expert of the Caucasus analytical center

    On Sept 1 Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili appeared with a very
    curious statement. While speaking in Sagarejo, he said that Russia is
    pressuring Armenia into adopting an anti-Georgian policy. At least,
    that's how (and in no other way) one should understand his following
    sentence: "Russia has finally closed the customs house in Lars; and
    closed it not only for us, but also for Armenia, whose cargoes have
    been going through Lars, because it tells Armenia too: let's carry out
    some plans together." Saakashvili did not care to specify what "plans"
    (perhaps, because there was nothing to specify) he was talking about,
    however, Saakashvili's "Armenian emphasis" is quite symptomatic as
    such. What made him appear with such a tactless (in every respect)
    statement?

    Saakashvili is hardly aware of what exactly the "relevant"
    Armenian-Russian talks are about; of course, we do not doubt the
    competence and awareness of the Georgian President, but the whole
    point is that Moscow and Yerevan are not plotting anything against
    Tbilisi. Anyway, Saakashvili appears to be sure of, at least, the
    present Armenian authorities; dwelling on the subject of imaginary
    Russian pressure on Armenia, he notes: "Naturally, nobody will agree
    to this, but such a policy - of pressure on Armenia over Georgia -
    is present!"

    It may also happen - it may well be so - that the imperative of the
    Georgian President - "naturally, nobody will agree to this" - has no
    specific addressee and is just a preventive move. We can see this in
    his following statement: "Nobody has ever succeeded through slavery.

    Only proud, self-respecting countries succeed - countries like Poland,
    Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, who did the same a few years ago and
    have become successful European states. I don't want to name a few
    other countries who are being led by those forces and are beggars
    and, today, they are as impoverished as they were before." Let's
    not conjecture what Saakashvili meant; the more important point is
    that Saakashvili's speech in Sagarejo - and the quite unexpected -
    at first glance - address to the Armenian issue - perfectly fits into
    the context and logic of his present policy.

    First of all, we should note that the process of ethnic consolidation
    of the Kartvelian nations populating Georgia (in the scale and content
    officially proclaimed by Tbilisi) is yet far from completion.

    Georgian citizens - representatives of the Kartvelian group
    of the Caucasian language family - are not objectively a single
    ethno-political community and are quite diverse in terms of traditions,
    culture, language, mentality and the perception of the very concept of
    "Homeland." For quite a long period in history, there was almost no
    consolidating ethnonyme in Georgia; even today, people representing
    the Kartvelian group do not identify themselves according to the
    state terminology. The diversity of dialects: Gurian, Imeretian,
    Lechkhumian, Rachian, Kartlian, Kakhetian, Pshavian, Meskhetian,
    Ingiloian and some others and the circumstance that Megrels (in
    particular) speak their own language reflect not so much the purely
    linguistic peculiarities of those groups as the extent of difference
    in their traditions, mentality and values.

    Particularly, the biggest Kartvelian group, Megrels, call themselves
    not "Kartvelians" but "Margali" and their country (their historical
    area - Homeland) - "Samargalio."

    It is especially important to note that, from the ancient times
    till the first half of XIX, the western and eastern parts of the
    Kartvelian group had very little contact with one another. The Surami
    Range dividing the territory of Georgia into two parts was a kind
    of Great Dividing Range between two worlds, and this fact has given
    rise to such concepts as "Amiereti" - the country behind the range -
    and Imiereti - the country before the range (like Ciscaucasia and
    Transcaucasia). It was exactly due to this historical division that
    the western Kartvelians are initially called "Imeretians." But, in
    fact, Imeretians are also Gurians (who call themselves "Guruli"),
    Lechkhumians, Rachians, etc. Megrels live farther to the west and
    have always been closer to Abkhazians than to Gurians or Imeretians.

    Eastwards of the Surami Range was the land of the eastern sub-groups
    - mostly Kartlians and Kakhetians, who have not historically had
    close contacts with the western Georgians, not mentioning Megrels,
    Abkhazians or Svans.

    Due to this peculiar logic of historical development, the Kartvelian
    group does not now have a single approach to the concept of
    "Homeland." This is a very important aspect of the problem we are
    considering - this aspect allows us to see how much interested the
    present-day population of the Republic of Georgia can actually be in
    "fighting and dying" for Abkhazia or South Ossetia. The foundations of
    the nationalist ideology were laid by public figures Ilia Chavchavadze
    and Akaky Tsereteli in late 19th century. It was exactly they who
    tried to give the local concept of "Homeland" a larger - mass -
    scale. And it was they who established a certain tradition: the factors
    consolidating the nation are based not so much on (the assertion of)
    the national - all-Kertvelian values - but on the search for the
    image of "extra-Kartvelian" enemy. Particularly, in his works Ilia
    Chavchavadze chose Armenians as "an enemy." "The Armenian choice"
    of Chavchavadze was due mostly to the fact that, unable to adjust
    themselves to the development of capitalist relations, the Georgian
    noblemen were forced to sell their estates to rich Armenian merchants.

    What really matters in this context is not so much the ethnicity of
    the "external enemy" as the very ideological existence of such an
    image. By the way, this ideology has lived up to now. The key weapon
    of the Georgian parties in the first quarter of the 20th century,
    this ideology predetermined the logic of the development of the
    national life, and the First Georgian Republic (1918-1920) was also
    based on the vector of United and Indivisible Georgia. At the same
    time, it should be noted that in 20th century this ideology failed to
    go outside the activities of the political elite and to grow into a
    national (all-Kartvelian) feeling. Still, as we have already said,
    the process of consolidation of the Kartvelian nations populating
    Georgia (in the scale and content proclaimed by Tbilisi) is far from
    completion. The political elite of new Georgia has failed to make the
    Abkhazian problem a consolidating - all-Kartvelian - factor. People
    have failed to see what exactly they must sacrifice themselves for.

    And even the western Georgians, who still have mutual problems, have
    refused to unite "for the sake of Abkhazia." Even more, in the most
    concerned Megrel community, we can see diametrically opposite moods -
    one part of Megrels is definitely closer to Abkhazians.

    The historical "psychology of feudal principalities" in Georgia is
    traditionally the most influential internal political factor in the
    country. Even more, it is exactly this psychology that gives birth to
    leaders of "national scale," whose political image reflects not only
    the specificity of "own nation" but also the traditional separatism of
    feudal princes. In this light, it should be noted that the concept of
    "separatism" the Georgian authorities keep applying to Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia is much more applicable to the lifestyle and traditional
    mentality of the Kartvelian society. The separatism of feudal princes
    has actually taken deep roots in the multi-layer Georgian soil, and the
    modern history proves this mentality to be quite viable. It is typical
    of almost every politically (publicly) significant figure in Georgia,
    irrespective of his psychological, moral or intellectual image. It
    is quite noteworthy that, right after his political fiasco, the first
    Georgian president Zviad Gamsakhurdia proclaimed the independence of
    the Megrel-Abkhazian Republic. And even this rare historical example
    is just the top of the iceberg of Georgian contradictions that is
    drifting around the scattered "principalities" of Sakartvelo.

    As we have already noted, besides the factor of linguistic isolation
    of the Kartvelian society, there is also another nuance that
    does not let the Abkhazian and South Ossetian problems become a
    consolidating factor. The Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic, just
    like the Republic of Georgia, internationally recognized within its
    territory, is a kind of empire, and the struggle of the country's
    leadership for Abkhazia is more like a colonial than patriotic war (in
    fact, it is a war of robbers - it's enough remembering the figures of
    "the leaders of the Georgian home guards"). This is a very important
    circumstance - as colonial wars more often shatter and even decay the
    rear than consolidate it. With no all-national concept of "Homeland" in
    Georgia, the local authorities still apply feudal ways of territorial
    administration. What we could see during the civil war was exactly
    a feudal rule; at a certain moment, the confrontation was very much
    like the squabble of "feudal princes" - the only difference was that
    the new rulers of the territories were not noblemen but criminals.

    Emzar Kvitsiani is a typical representative of the Pleiad of
    "Georgian feudal lords" of the epoch of independence. That's why the
    acting Georgian authorities tend to qualify almost every de facto
    disobedient administrative-territorial unit as "a bed of criminal
    structures." And they do this irrespective of the extent of their own
    corruption. In this light, we would like to remind you the words of
    the well-known Georgian historian Berdzenishvili, who wrote in 1937:
    "Feudal Sakartvelo (Georgia) has never fully embraced the concepts of
    'Abkhazia,' 'Kartli,' 'Kakheti,' 'Somkheti' and the title of the King
    of United Georgia has never turned into a formula with historical
    content."

    The present Georgian President sees himself in the historical
    chronicles standing beside the most respected monarchs of the past.

    His fixed idea is to restore the territorial integrity of the
    Georgian state and, more importantly, to resolve the historical
    internal Kartvelian conflicts. He truly imagines himself to be
    the monarch of United Georgia. This is a very important nuance -
    a nuance that must be always kept in mind; the present Georgian
    President is capable of any most unexpected and thoughtless action:
    he is really unsurpassed in giving political surprises. He can take
    aback even the most sophisticated technologists; the ace of political
    intrigue, feudal lord Aslan Abashidze, was unable to oppose anything
    (constructive) to the irrationalism of Mikheil Saakashvili; the
    President is illogical and sure of being the chosen one. He really
    believes that his destination is to unite Great Georgia. Being the US'
    protege, he is not like his "nest brothers" - Viktor Yushchenko or
    Alexander Milinkevich, who are being actively built up by the masters
    of Hammer and Angle Bar; unlike them, Saakashvili has the Idea. The
    first thing that comes into mind is the famous phrase: "If Garibaldi
    had not been a Mason, Italy would not have united." That's probably
    how Saakashvili interprets his position of a "protege" - at least,
    for the time being.

    The first Georgian President also felt himself as a kind of missionary,
    but, among other things, he lacked extravagance: pedantic Zviad was
    not a trouble maker. He clearly saw that his country was "a patchwork
    blanket" and realized that this mosaic posed a real threat to the
    idea of United Georgia. At first, he also tried to implant the idea
    of Common and United Homeland into the minds of all the Kartvelians
    and traveled the whole Sakartvelo for this purpose; emotionally
    restrained, seaside Megrel, he praised Kakhetia as the first wine
    grower. "Demographically, Kakhetia has always been a mono-national
    region, and Georgians have always been a majority here," he said in
    the Kakhetian village of Akhalsopeli in 1989.

    "Today, we are facing a serious problem. Tatars, Armenians and
    Ossetians have risen to their feet. We must save from foreigners
    Kakhetia - our holy land!" Could Gamsakhurdia imagine then that
    some few years later he would be forced to rise with the idea of a
    Megrel-Abkhazian Republic?

    Today, there are no grounds for speaking about serious prerequisites
    for changing the state structure exactly as a mechanism consolidating
    the nation, especially as there was almost no concept of "the King
    of All Georgia" in Georgia's history; at the time of the signing of
    the Treaty of Georgievsk (in Aug 1783) Irakly II was called the King
    of Kartli-Kakheti. The authority of the Georgian King has never been
    a consolidating force as people in other regions swore allegiance
    to other rulers - the King of Imeretia and others; in fact, the
    restoration of monarchy in the disintegrated Georgian society may
    disintegrate the Georgian state.

    President Saakashvili, who is really daydreaming of a Place in the
    chronicles of the Georgian history (certainly, next to the most
    outstanding rulers), is going to solve this problem too; of course,
    not as a King but as the ruler of "All Georgia." He openly views the
    period of his accession to "the presidential throne" in the context
    of the events of early XIX. The starting point for him is 1801 when
    the western Georgian Kingdom was abolished and annexed to Russia. The
    supporters of the ambitious President consider the following 205
    years as the "frozen interval" of the national life.

    In this context, we would like to point to the speech of the advisor of
    the Georgian president, former prime minister and MP of Estonia Mart
    Laar: "The so-called 'Russian peacekeepers' are not keeping peace,
    they are trying to keep the last fragments of the Russian Empire." The
    July 28 article in the Akhali 7 Dge daily is also quite symptomatic:
    "It is exactly the strong powers that tell the other countries involved
    in international relations how to play in the political game and
    often decide in their stead. As a rule, small and weak countries are
    'oppressed' in international relations. For such countries it is very
    dangerous to be neighbor to a strong country as stronger neighbors
    leave weaker countries no chance for maneuver or choice. Unfortunately,
    Georgia is a small country neighboring on Russia - this is our 'gift
    of fortune.' Russia's policy on the Caucasus has not changed. Czarism
    is still Russia's ideology. This crossroads of the world civilization
    is still the axis of the Russian neo-imperialism, and Georgia is part
    of this axis. For years Russia has refused to put up with the lost
    of this rebellious country. They can't put up with the fact that our
    small country is showing resistance to Great Russia. Russia has failed
    to enslave Georgia even though for many years it has been pressuring
    our country economically and supporting separatist regimes."

    It is noteworthy that the emphasis on the year 1801 (just like on
    the Treaty of Georgievsk) goes well together with Saakashvili's
    world-view; it allows him to kill several birds at once: to
    demonstrate his ambitions and succession to royal traditions, to
    present the Georgians as a chosen noble society (thereby, increasing
    discrimination against other non-Kartvelian citizens), to show why
    Georgia has lost its independence - because of Russia. Each of these
    vectors is a doctrine for a special study - a self-sufficient policy -
    but only taken together, do they form the "effect of Saakashvili."

    The policy to blame Russia for the loss of the Georgian throne
    fits well into the context of the present developments in Georgia;
    the American strategy of expansion into the region requires further
    aggravation of Russian-Georgian relations, and this fits well with the
    mood and ambitions of Mikheil Saakashvili. The July 5 2006 meeting of
    the US and Georgian presidents resulted in George Bush's statement
    that each state has the right to carry out military actions against
    radical forces with a view to protect its own security and sovereignty.

    Even though this statement was made in connection with the Middle
    East events and was aimed at justifying the policy of Israel, it was
    equally referred to Georgia. Some sources say that this issue was even
    discussed during the Washington meeting. "This meeting was absolutely
    historic for Georgia," Saakashvili said. "I am sure it was, and the
    Georgian people will certainly see its results. It is absolutely
    clear that the US will support our struggle for freedom till the
    end." We should note that, when saying "struggle for freedom,"
    the Georgian President also means the restoration of Georgia's
    territorial integrity.

    It is especially important to note that, when speaking about the
    right of each country to protect its independence and security by
    any means, George Bush emphasized the destructive influence on one or
    another region by exactly the forces supporting terrorism. As early
    as July 9 - just four days after the meeting - a terrorist act in
    Tskhinvali claimed the life of South Ossetian Security Secretary Oleg
    Alborov; two weeks later the Georgian Parliament adopted a resolution
    "On Peacekeeping Forces in the Conflict Zones"; and on July 21 the
    Georgian President dismissed his State Minister for Conflict Resolution
    Giorgy Khaindrava. The next step was the "anti-criminal operation in
    Kodori Gorge."

    The royal hunt for birds has revealed one more target for the
    indignant Georgian "monarchists" - Armenians. In the context of the
    constantly discussed topic of 1801 and the policy of making an enemy
    of Russia, the researchers cannot but point out that "the decree
    on the liquidation of the Georgian throne was read out in Tiflis
    (Tbilisi) by Armenian Iosif Argutinsky, and the first governor
    general was Armenian general Lazarev." In the first half of the
    20th century Georgians began showing increasingly negative attitude
    towards Armenians; they regarded Armenians as Russia's proteges and
    the heralds of the loss of the Georgian throne. The founder of the
    Georgian nationalist ideology Ilia Chavchavadze wrote: "Armenian
    scholars are standing their ground, they are seeking to get home in
    a place they have never had home... they wish to convince everybody
    that they allegedly have the historical right to live here."

    This idea runs through the nationalist ideology to these days. No
    coincidence that during the "revolution of roses" certain
    representatives of the Georgian nation, particularly, those from
    the nobles, expressed concern for the presence of Armenian blood in
    the veins of all the three leaders of the revolution; those times
    were not easy for Saakashvili... "Christian Georgians have always
    felt danger on the part of Armenians," says the academic head of the
    Russian Project of Jerusalem University, Dr. Dan Shapira. "Armenians
    have lived in Georgia since the beginning of time. Even the capital
    of Georgia, Tbilisi, has until recently been the Armenian city
    and the key Armenian cultural center eastwards of Istanbul. Thus,
    Jews have never been regarded in Georgia as a problem or threat -
    the traditional place of 'Jew' was occupied by Armenians."

    In other words, anti-Semitism in Georgia has traditionally been
    expressed in the form of Armeno-phobia. As we have already noted, the
    Georgian President is trying to implant the idea of Common Homeland
    in the minds of the Kartvelians and to make this a basis for a new
    scale of values. Language is not a consolidating factor, that's why
    general consciousness of Homeland is given an exclusive role.

    This is also important from pragmatic point of view; only if generally
    conscious of their Homeland, will the Kartvelian people be able to
    perceive the unprecedented achievements the acting president has made
    in the last years - first of all, the establishment of control over
    Ajaria and Abkhazian Svanetia. Otherwise, all his achievements will
    look just a zero (in the general consciousness).

    That's why he is forced to regularly appear with the story about
    notorious Armenian-Russian plot against Georgia in hope that the
    factor of external enemy will consolidate the Georgian society. In
    "his game" Mikheil Saakashvili actually needs nationalists.
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