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Finding Out Who'S To Blame For This War

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  • Finding Out Who'S To Blame For This War

    FINDING OUT WHO'S TO BLAME FOR THIS WAR
    Alexei Pankin

    The Moscow Times
    12 August 2008

    Since Friday, I have been trying to figure out who is at fault for
    what is happening in South Ossetia. State television claims that
    the blame lies with Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili and his
    supporters in the West. However, I have long ago stopped believing
    state television reports, even when their statements seem to be true.

    >From morning until evening, Ekho Moskvy radio has been airing
    political commentaries describing the consequences of this outbreak
    of hostilities in Georgia. But they have not provided an answer to
    the one question that most interests me, "Who started this war?"

    The television antenna at my dacha, where I spent the weekend, has
    been picking up Euronews much better lately, and there I heard the
    following "objective" information: Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and
    President Dmitry Medvedev accuse Georgia of carrying out genocide in
    South Ossetia, while Saakashvili blames Russian aggression.

    Heart-rending images of the violence filled the screen, with "no
    comment" as the only explanation.

    On Sunday, I received a long-awaited guest at my dacha, Dmitry
    Furman, a leading expert on former Soviet republics, including the
    Caucasus. But he had barely stepped through the gate when he said:
    "Don't ask me what's going on. I don't understand a thing."

    Soon after, the news editor for one of Russia's comparatively
    independent television channels came to visit. She was speaking on
    her cell phone as she entered the dacha, emotionally explaining that,
    "Our Olympic Games correspondent, for whom we paid big money for
    accreditation, transportation and housing, is complaining that he
    has nothing to do in Beijing and that we should send him to South
    Ossetia." The whole time we were barbecuing and eating shashlik,
    she was on the phone trying to work out how her journalists could
    report on the conflict without interrupting Olympic coverage.

    That left me with little choice but to become philosophical regarding
    my question of who was the first to attack Tskhinvali? It occurred to
    me that we buried one of Josef Stalin's greatest opponents, Alexander
    Solzhenitsyn, last week, but the tensions that Stalin stirred up were
    continuing to exert their influence. It was Stalin who laid down the
    illogical borders between the Soviet republics. He did so based on
    the belief that they were so unnatural that nobody would ever dream of
    trying to tamper with them, understanding what terrible consequences
    would result.

    History has shown that Stalin was overly optimistic. Having lost
    their fear of Mikhail Gorbachev's democratic Kremlin, nationalist
    democrats in Soviet republics like Russia, Armenia, Moldova and
    Georgia began behaving as if the borders that Stalin drew between
    peoples were actually "historical borders" between states, leading
    to much bloodshed. After those conflicts and the terrible slaughter
    in the former Yugoslavia, we hoped that nothing similar would happen
    in the 21st century. However, the bloodshed has been repeated, and
    the conflict began on 08-08-08, the day the Chinese considered lucky
    enough to open the Olympic Games.

    I am not a Russian patriot, although I try to force myself to love
    the country of which I am a citizen. I was, and still am, a citizen
    of the Soviet Union, a country without internal borders and where
    friends of different ethnicities and I were united in our hatred of
    totalitarianism and in the belief that political freedom would give
    us the opportunity to live in harmony. I have never contested the
    right of the various Soviet peoples to establish their own states.

    But I strongly dislike all those little Napoleons -- whether they
    are named Boris Yeltsin, Vladimir Putin, former Georgian President
    Zviad Gamsakhurdia or Saakashvili -- who instead of freeing their
    citizens from the Stalinist Soviet Union have created mini-empires
    within illogically imposed borders and played out their delusions of
    grandeur using the blood of their own people.
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