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  • Saving Georgia

    SAVING GEORGIA
    by Ariel Cohen

    Heritage.org
    August 12, 2008
    DC

    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has announced that Moscow is putting
    on hold hostilities in Georgia, apparently due to the pleas from the
    U.S. and Europe to cease aggression against Georgia. Many questions
    remain open, including:

    Signature and stability of the cease-fire; The timing of the Russian
    withdrawal from sovereign Georgian territory; Recognition of full
    Georgian sovereignty and territorial integrity; and Terminating
    attempts by Moscow to remove Georgian leadership by force.

    The threats to Georgia's political survival and to Southern Caucasus
    states' independence have not disappeared, and Russia's massive use
    of force against its small neighbor remains appalling and deeply
    troubling.

    As the Olympic Games opened Friday, August 8, the tragic and
    ominous conflict between Georgia and Russia erupted as well. Moscow
    responded with overwhelming force to the Georgian fire on Tskhinvali,
    capital of South Ossetia. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin flew from
    the Beijing Olympics to Vladikavkaz, taking control of the military
    operations. Putin sidelined his successor, Dmitry Medvedev, thereby
    leaving no doubt as to who is in charge.

    The 58th Russian Army of the North Caucasus Military District
    rolled into South Ossetia, reinforced by the 76th Airborne "Pskov"
    Division. The Black Sea Fleet blockaded Georgian coast and shelled
    the strategic port of Poti. Cossacks from the neighboring Russian
    territories moved in to combat the Georgians as well.

    Following the third day of heavy fighting, and after rejecting the
    Georgian cease-fire offer, Russia has struck far beyond contested
    South Ossetia, opening up a second front in Abkhazia. Pushing deep
    into Georgia, the Russian Army has seized military bases and several
    towns including Senaki and Zugdidi, as well as the key Georgian
    city of Gori, the birthplace of the Soviet tyrant Joseph Stalin. By
    taking Gori and the east-west highway passing through the town, the
    Russians have effectively cut the country in half, severing its main
    transportation artery.

    Russian forces have also bombed the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, the
    only avenue for exporting Central Asian energy, which is independent of
    Russian control. Throwing aside any pretense of "stopping a genocide,"
    the Russian troops pushed forward and, on Monday evening, were 20
    kilometers away from the Georgian capital Tbilisi. There is a good
    chance that these troops will advance on Tbilisi in the next 24 hours.

    Russia's goals for the war with Georgia are far-reaching and include:

    Expulsion of Georgian troops and termination of Georgian sovereignty in
    South Ossetia and Abkhazia; "Regime change" by bringing down President
    Mikheil Saakashvili and installing a more pro-Russian leadership in
    Tbilisi; Preventing Georgia from joining NATO and sending a strong
    message to Ukraine that its insistence on NATO membership may lead to
    war and/or its dismemberment; Shifting control of the Caucasus, and
    especially over strategic energy pipelines, by controlling Georgia;
    and Recreating a 19th-century-style sphere of influence in the former
    Soviet Union, by the use of force if necessary.

    Rebuilding the Russian Empire: The Challenge to Europe's Status Quo

    Russian relations with Georgia were the worst among the post-Soviet
    states. In addition to fanning the flames of separatism in South
    Ossetia since 1990, Russia militarily supported separatists in Abkhazia
    (1992-93), which is also a part of Georgian territory. Russia also
    had a cantankerous relationship with then-Georgian President Eduard
    Shevardnadze, the former Soviet foreign minister, whom hardliners
    in Moscow blamed for the Soviet withdrawal from Central and Eastern
    Europe. In the 1990s, there were two assassination attempts against
    Shevardnadze, and elements of the Russian state, such as secret
    services or military intelligence, came under suspicion both times.

    Russia has long prepared its aggression against Georgia's pro-Western
    President Mikheil Saakashvili, in order to undermine his rule and
    prevent Georgia from joining NATO. Despite claims about oppressed
    minority status, the separatist South Ossetian leadership is mostly
    ethnic Russians, many of whom served in the KGB, the Soviet secret
    police, the Russian military, or the Soviet communist party.

    In recent years, Moscow granted the majority of Abkhazs and South
    Ossetians Russian citizenship and moved to establish close economic
    and bureaucratic ties with the two separatist republics, effectively
    enacting a creeping annexation of both territories.

    The use of Russian citizenship to create a "protected" population
    residing in a neighboring state to undermine its sovereignty is a
    slippery slope that is now leading to a redrawing of the former Soviet
    borders. Brave voices asserted that Russia lost the moral right for
    peacekeeping in Abkhazia and South Ossetia when, circumventing the
    leadership of sovereign Georgia, it

    became close friends with the de facto organs of power of these
    self-declared entities. Now, casting aside any decency, bringing
    airborne units into Georgia, bombing territory that isn't even part of
    the former South Ossetian Autonomous Republic, Russia ... has become
    a party to an armed conflict.

    No valiant Western voice issued this statement. As has so frequently
    been the case throughout history, the above-mentioned statement was
    made by a pitifully small but morally righteous group of Russian
    human rights activists, led by Lev Ponomarev, Sergei Kovalyov, and
    Yelena Bonner (Andrey Sakharov's widow). The group proceeded to call
    for Russia to be expelled from the Group of Eight (G-8), and for the
    United Nations, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
    (OSCE), and the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE)
    to impose sanctions on Russia.

    Chilling Language, Strategic Actions

    Aggression against Georgia also sends a strong signal to
    Ukraine and Europe. Russia is playing a chess game of offense and
    intimidation. Former president and current Prime Minister Vladimir
    Putin spoke last spring about Russia "dismembering" Ukraine, another
    NATO candidate, and detaching the Crimea, a peninsula that was
    transferred from Russia to Ukraine in 1954 when both were integral
    parts of the Soviet Union.

    Today, up to 50 percent of Ukrainian citizens speak Russian as
    their first language, and ethnic Russians comprise approximately
    one-fifth of Ukraine's population. With encouragement from Moscow,
    these people may be induced to follow South Ossetia and Abkhazia to
    Mother Russia's bosom. Yet Ukraine's pro-Western leaders, such as
    President Victor Yushchenko and Prime Minister Yulia Timoshenko,
    have expressed a desire to join NATO, while pro-Moscow Ukrainian
    Party of Regions effectively opposes membership. NATO opponents in
    Ukraine are greatly encouraged by Russia's action against Georgia.

    Beyond this, Russia is demonstrating that it can sabotage American and
    European Union (EU) declarations about integrating Commonwealth of
    Independent States members into Western structures such as NATO. By
    attempting to accomplish regime change in Georgia, Moscow is also
    trying to gain control of the energy and transportation corridor
    which connects Central Asia and Azerbaijan with the Black Sea and
    ocean routes overseas--for oil, gas and other commodities.

    A pro-Russian regime in Georgia will also bring the strategic
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline and the Baku-Erzurum (Turkey) gas
    pipeline under Moscow's control. Such a development would undermine
    any options of pro-Western orientation for Azerbaijan and Armenia,
    along with any chances of resolving their conflict based on diplomacy
    and Western-style cooperation.

    The West's Hour of Truth

    The United States and its European allies must take all available
    diplomatic measures to stop Russian aggression. To uphold the
    international order, to repel aggression, and to advance our national
    interests and those of the West at large, the U.S. should:

    Send Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to Europe to coordinate
    support for condemning Russian aggression in Georgia among our
    allies. The U.S. and Europe should lead the world in demanding that
    Russia withdraw all its troops from the territory of Georgia and
    recognize Georgia's territorial integrity; Convey to Russia that its
    invasion of Georgia has forfeited its membership in the G-8 and may
    derail its aspirations to join the World Trade Organization and to host
    the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, only 200 kilometers from Georgia;
    Push for great powers to speak out, including Germany, France, India,
    Brazil, Japan, Korea, Turkey, and possibly China. This support would
    "globalize" the condemnation; Continue pressure within the United
    Nations Security Council and the General Assembly to achieve a
    resolution that will voice full and unequivocal support for Georgian
    territorial integrity, including Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and for
    Russian troop withdrawal; Send international observers to Georgia
    from OSCE, the EU and the United Nations in order to expand mediation
    efforts to withdraw Russian forces; Begin talks at a neutral forum
    such as the OSCE to finally settle the South Ossetian matter as well
    as future Abkhazian problems. This can be done by granting these
    territories full autonomy within the Georgian state, as Tbilisi
    has repeatedly suggested; Reiterate NATO's position on Ukraine,
    which holds that the country will become a member of NATO through the
    extension of a Membership Action Plan and that the member states look
    forward to assessing Ukraine's progress at the December 2008 meeting;
    Announce the deployment of amphibious ships into the Black Sea as a
    non-combatant Evacuation Operations, which will be coordinated with
    all Black Sea littoral states; and Offer humanitarian assistance to
    Georgia, such as aiding the wounded and refugees, and evacuating the
    friends of the U.S. if necessary.

    Beyond this, the United States, its allies, and other countries need to
    send a strong signal to Moscow that creating 19th-century-style spheres
    of influence and redrawing the borders of the former Soviet Union
    is a danger to world peace. The U.S. and its European allies should
    communicate to Moscow that its aggression will not stand and cannot
    be accomplished without irreparable harm to Russia's international
    standing for decades to come. The U.S., its allies and Europe must
    do everything possible to stop the aggression against Georgia.

    Ariel Cohen, Ph.D., is Senior Research Fellow in Russian and Eurasian
    Studies and International Energy Security in the Douglas and Sarah
    Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies, a division of the Kathryn
    and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies at The
    Heritage Foundation.
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