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Transcaucasia After NATO Summit In Bucharest: Cumulation Of Threats

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  • Transcaucasia After NATO Summit In Bucharest: Cumulation Of Threats

    TRANSCAUCASIA AFTER NATO SUMMIT IN BUCHAREST: CUMULATION OF THREATS
    Andrei Areshev

    http://en.fondsk.ru/article.php?id=1342
    1 8.04.2008

    Caucasia, Georgia, Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Armenia, Karabakh, NATO
    At the summit in Bucharest in early April, NATO members were split
    over Ukraine's and Georgia's accession to the alliance, and it was
    decided to postpone their membership process till December. There
    could be no dual approach to the issue.

    Some experts believe that the time factor will serve the purposes
    of Moscow and other countries of the "old Europe" which are against
    NATO`s forced expansion. They think that by December Kiev and Tbilisi
    may face some problems that will make their NATO membership process
    less probable and even removed from the agenda.

    If there were even slightest possibilities that everything would happen
    in such a way, we should find this process the most suitable for all
    sides concerned, and, first of all, for the peoples of Georgia and
    Ukraine, who are being persuaded by the mass media that the accession
    to the western military alliance will their countries prosperous.

    Let us abandon our illusions. The process of NATO`s eastward
    expansion has gone too far, and there`s little doubt that in the
    long run Ukraine and Georgia will be given the green light to join
    the alliance. U.S., the ground slipped from under their feet in Iraq
    and Afghanistan, is now preoccupied with gaining control over the
    most important geopolitical regions in the post-Soviet territory-
    Ukraine, Transcaucasia and Central Asia, where NATO's first ever
    Special Representative for the Caucasus and Central Asia, Robert
    Simmons, had already arrived to demonstrate the Atlantic Alliance's
    willingness to expand its relations with the partner countries
    of those regions. In fact, Washington sees these territories as a
    springboard for their influence on Russia, Iran and China. That was
    not by chance that some politicians in Kiev have been insisting that
    some vast territories in Russia belong to Ukraine.

    The current process of Ukraine's and Georgia's transition to NATO
    membership is not a hypothetic but a real threat to the Russian
    security. If we analyze the recent anti-Chinese hysteria over the
    August Olympic Games in Beijing, we may get a clear picture of what
    Russia is in for ahead of its 2014 Winter Olympiad in Sochi. The
    regions of Transcaucasia, integrated in NATO, Georgia in the first
    place (especially in case of successful annexation of South Ossetia and
    Abkhazia), will be serve the U.S. interests aimed at destabilization
    of the North Caucasus.

    "Of course, Russia will take adequate measures to protect its
    interests, - Russia's Military Chief of Staff, Yuri Baluevsky, said.-
    It will be something more than just military measures". The sooner
    Moscow makes these steps, the better, as it is clear nowadays that the
    verbal protests do not work and won`t stop NATO`s eastward expansion.

    It is very likely that Tbilisi dares to launch military aggression
    against Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Speaking at the mountain troops`
    training center in Sachkher (near Kutaisi) on April, 8, Georgian
    President Mikhail Saakashvili boasted that the country had purchased
    a few billion dollars in arms deals. "Our lives are dedicated to the
    future unity of Georgia, and we won`t give up until Georgia becomes
    free and united. All our victories are before us".

    Neither the Abkhaz people nor the South Ossetians or other national
    minorities living in Georgia and Ukraine need be explained that
    further integration of these two countries into NATO together with
    "consolidation" of the Georgian and Ukrainian "political nations"
    on the anti-Russian basis would only make their lives worse.

    The signs of aggression are becoming more evident. Some Georgian
    political analysts say "Russia is pushing Georgia to launch a military
    action in Abkhazia". According to the head of the International Center
    for Conflists and Negotiations, Georgy Khutsishvili, "Russia may take
    active steps and officially recognize the self-proclaimed republics
    or annex them and thus provoke a harsh reaction from Georgia".

    In an interview with Estonia's daily "Postimees", Georgia's Prime
    Minister Lado Gurgenidze leaked a word, saying that Georgia was
    in principle prepared to recognize Kosovo. The official Tbilisi
    accused Estonian journalists of misinterpreting Gurgenidze`s words
    but "Postimees" reporter Igor Taro, who conducted the interview
    with Gurgenidze, played the recording of the interview to prove that
    Gurgenidze had really made that statement. However, these words could
    be interpreted in another way: Gurgenidze wanted to say that Georgia
    could recognize Kosovo as the Albanian state soon after Tbilisi founded
    the solution to Abkhazian and South Ossetian issues as a result of a
    military operation. And a possibility of such an operation is becoming
    more real as Georgia receives informational and diplomatic support
    from Washington. The U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Daniel Freed
    has repeatedly promised that Moscow would face serious problems if
    recognizes Abkhazia and South Ossetia, while only the recognition of
    the two self-proclaimed republics (even in a form of bilateral defence
    agreements) would prevent Saakashvili from large-scale provocations
    and military campaigns.

    The situation in Nagorno-Karabakh has also grown out of hand. A
    U.S. diplomat Matthew Bryza said at the summit in Bucharest that
    the talks on the status of the Nagorno-Karabakh should result in a
    bilateral agreement. It must be noted that Mr. Bryza meant not the
    negotiation process as such but the revision of the region's status,
    which presupposes concessions from Armenia. In order to make the
    new Armenian government more tractable, some pro-Western experts in
    Armenia, guided by the International Crisis Group, have spoken in
    favor of economic sanctions against their homeland.

    Observers say the constructors of the "new world order" are aimed at
    presenting the "Abkhazian", the "South Ossetian" and the "Karabakh"
    precedents a direct opposite to the "Kosovo" issue. And a key role
    is assigned to NATO here. Neither the CIS nor the OSCE could set
    anything against this. Even Kazakhstan opposed Russia's decision to
    withdraw from the regime of sanctions towards Abkhazia, and this is
    only one of the examples of the existing differences between the CIS
    and the OSCE over the "frozen conflicts" in Transcaucasia.

    The position of Iran, which is strictly against NATO`s presence in
    the Caucasus, turns out to be a more significant factor in stabilizing
    the whole situation.

    Too much depends on Moscow. Russia is expected to have a nerve to
    prevent new bloodshed in the region.
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