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Analysis: Russia sends a message to the West

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  • Analysis: Russia sends a message to the West

    http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1218104 259471&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
    A ug 10, 2008 23:40 | Updated Aug 10, 2008 23:46

    Analysis: Russia sends a message to the West
    By TOVAH LAZAROFF

    Georgia lost a foolhardy gamble in thumbing its nose at its powerful
    neighbor Russia, which this weekend bombed Georgian cities and wrested
    control of its breakaway province of South Ossetia, according to
    Israeli Russian experts.

    Russia had seen a "golden opportunity" to teach Georgia and its
    neighbors a lesson to "behave properly," said Hebrew University
    Russian expert Yitzhak Brudny, as he explained how a small military
    flare-up between Georgia and South Ossetia had turned into a major
    military exercise for Russia and drawn world attention away from the
    Olympics in Beijing.

    With all eyes turned toward China, Georgia's pro-Western President
    Mikheil Saakashvili had hoped he could respond harshly to a skirmish
    with South Ossetia on Friday and try and regain control of the
    separatist province, said Russian expert Amnon Sella of the
    Interdisciplinary Center at Herzliya.

    "It backfired on him because Georgia, which has a very small army,
    can't take on Russia," which had obviously been prepared for such a
    move given its swift response, said Sella.

    "Saakashvili is a young president who is not well seasoned in
    international affairs," said Sella. He had hoped the international
    community and in particular the West would support Georgia's moves in
    South Ossetia and that Russia would not respond, he added.

    Saakashvili, explained Brudny, has a reputation for being a "hothead"
    who does not always think through what he is doing.

    Instead of responding diplomatically, Russia, which has granted
    passports to most South Ossetians, sent combat troops into South
    Ossetia and attacked Georgia from the air.

    The bombardment was a way for Moscow to kill a few birds with one
    stone, Brundy and other academics said.

    It showed both Georgia and the West that Russia was a regional
    superpower to be reckoned with, said Brudny. The message was: "We are
    going to use force, we are not going to tolerate a hostile regime on
    our borderland."

    "Russia wants to maintain the status quo, meaning they wield influence
    over the region," including a monopoly on sources of energy, said
    Sella. Running through Georgia is the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipline, the
    second largest in the world for the transport of crude oil, he said.

    By flexing its military might against Georgia, Moscow paid the West
    back for its recognition of Kosovo's independence; a move that Russia
    had opposed, said Brudny.

    In addition, he said, Russia hoped that its violent response would
    mark the beginning of the end of the Saakashvili government, which
    seeks to join NATO and had moved the country away from Russia in favor
    of the West. Moscow would like to see a pro-Russian government replace
    Saakshvilli, he added.

    Russia is nervous because NATO is expanding into its back yard with
    both Georgia and the Ukraine seeking membership at the same time that
    NATO is putting an anti-missile system in eastern Europe, specifically
    in in Poland and Chechnya, said Zvi Magen, a former ambassador to
    Russia and the current chairman of the Institute for Eurasian studies
    at the IDC in Herzliya.

    While the system is supposedly aimed at protecting Europe from Iran,
    the Russians are still uneasy about it, he added.

    Saakshvilli, in a way, had been "ambushed" by the larger forces in
    play here, said Magen. For some time now Russia had been in opposition
    to the West in its region, but had been able to do little more than
    verbally protest - this was an opportunity for it to flex its muscles,
    said Magen.

    In this way, he added, it also sent a message to the American
    administration that will replace Bush in January: Russia is not a
    force to be ignored.
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