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  • Russian-Georgian Conflagration

    RUSSIAN-GEORGIAN CONFLAGRATION

    Stabroek News
    Wednesday, August 13, 2008
    Guyana

    There is a certain inevitability to the conflagration which has flared
    up between the Russian Federation and the Caucasus state of Georgia,
    once a republic of the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
    (USSR). A correspondent of the New York Times, James Traub, has
    observed that "The border between Georgia and Russia...has been the
    driest of tinder; the only question was where the fire would start".

    The fire has started in South Ossetia which, along with two other
    territories bordering Russia - Abkazia and Ajaria - Georgia has claimed
    since it gained its independence after the USSR's dissolution. Ajaria
    has been more or less fully integrated into Georgia since then, but
    with President Saakashvili's ascent to office the pressure on Russia
    has increased in the other two territories which have substantial
    numbers of Russian descendants or citizens.

    The conflict is part of the inheritance of the dissolution of the
    USSR and in some respects resembles early disputes and arguments
    between the Baltic states and Russia after the former gained their
    independence, with a large residue of Russian speaking persons left
    in their territories, and a consequent Russian insistence that they
    be not discriminated against. That Russian pressure, whether in the
    Baltics or in the two territories in Georgia, or in Chechnya and
    Nagorno-Khasabak in the Caucasus as well, has certainly increased
    since former President Putin took office in Russia, and pulled the
    country out of an economic slump which had severely affected the
    Russian leadership's self-confidence.

    Georgia has always had a special significance for Russia by whatever
    name the latter has been called, and in whatever geopolitical
    arrangement it has appeared since Czarist times. Georgia's location
    bordering the Black Sea and Russia, and serving as a buffer between
    Russia and Turkey, has tended to give it a significance beyond
    its relatively small size, and made it of continuing interest to
    Russia. Russia of course has historically considered the Caucasus
    an area of deep strategic significance for itself, and in a sense,
    has retained not simply a strategic, but a sentimental interest
    in the countries of the area which were once under its rule. It is
    interesting that some years ago, then President Putin was inclined
    to remark that the dissolution of the Soviet Union was a tragedy -
    by which he surely meant, a tragedy not so much in ideological terms,
    but in geopolitical terms relating to the perception and reality of
    Russia, in whatever guise, as a Great Power.

    This latter perception has induced Putin, and his successor President
    Medvedev, to take a particular interest in Georgia under its current
    leadership. President Saakashvili, since he took office at the
    beginning of 2004, and further to his re-election in May of this year,
    has insisted that Georgia is entitled to become a full-fledged partner
    of "the West". Part of his intention is ideological - an affinity
    for free market methods and liberalism, and a sentimental attachment
    to the United States, where he had been trained at the Columbia Law
    School in New York. But the other part of his affinity relates to
    a firm desire to have a buffer from outside the region between his
    country and the Soviet Union. He has been quick to insist that his
    country should become a member of NATO, has encouraged the United
    States in military training in his country, and has had Georgia
    participate in NATO's Partnership for Peace programme.

    In that regard he follows the behaviour of the current leadership
    of the Ukraine, whose orientation, desire for NATO membership and
    willingness to accept US or NATO missiles on his territory, has been
    a source of great displeasure for Russia.

    Russia under Putin has consistently held that NATO was an instrument
    of the USSR-USA Cold War competition, and that since the dissolution
    of the world socialist system, it should be replaced by a new
    institutional system of cooperation that would include both the past
    Soviet system members, including Russia and the countries of the
    traditional "West". Putin and Medvedev do not recognize the vocabulary
    of "East" and "West" as reflecting contemporary European and Eurasian
    realities. Recall that Putin was, until the dissolution of the USSR,
    a significant KGB official with long experience in Germany.

    It has been little observed in Western circles, but is thought to
    be psychologically important for Russia too, that both Georgia and
    Ukraine should not be excessively penetrated by the United States,
    given the history that those countries and Russia have had. Karl
    Marx, in his study on Napoleon the Third, made the observation that
    "the traditions of all the dead generations weigh like a nightmare
    on the brains of the living". In that context, it is noteworthy that
    the man who ruled the Soviet Union for a large part of its existence
    was born in Georgia, and frequently referred to as "the Georgian" -
    Joseph Stalin. Stalin's key facilitator in taking care of his enemies
    was also a Georgian - Laventri Beria. Khruschev was, of course a
    native of Ukraine, the longstanding Foreign Minister of the USSR,
    Mikoyan was from the Caucasus - Armenia; and the last Foreign Minister
    of the USSR was the Georgian Edouard Shevardnadze who went on to lead
    independent Georgia.

    The sensitivities involved in these old relationships may have
    little resonance in the West, and in the United States, in the
    crafting of its policy towards the post-Cold War "East". President
    Saakashvili has tended to downplay these "sentimental" aspects of
    Russian contemporary policy, as the United States itself has sought to
    establish a presence in the post-Soviet system in so-called Eastern
    Europe. But from a Russian point of view, the US took advantage of
    the economic weakness of Russia in the 1990's, and President Yeltsin's
    erratic policy making, to establish strategic advantages over Russia,
    not only in Eastern Europe, but also east of Russia towards, and
    within, the Asian geographical space.

    >From Russia's point of view, President Saakashvili has sought to
    take advantage of that situation and, as a small country has sought
    to punch above its weight in the international relations of Europe,
    seeking as his biggest prize a tight relationship with the United
    States. The Medvedev-Putin leadership is, in that context, seizing
    an opportunity to reverse the Georgian orientation, and to establish
    a basis for balance between Russia and the major powers of the NATO
    system. In that context too, Russia is inclined to treat its conflict
    with Georgia as a European problem, and to pay scant regard to any
    calls from the United Nations for the re-establishment of peace
    between itself and its small near neighbour.

    What any Russian victory in the present conflict will not do, however,
    is to resolve the various geopolitical contentions in the Caucasus
    that have affected the region for so long. It is unlikely that Russia
    will ever be able to geopolitically, and therefore diplomatically,
    close off the area as it once did. The interpenetration of economic
    systems that follows globalization is too powerful for that. And,
    as the Chinese have themselves found, there is a salience to the
    objections to domination from minorities and small jurisdictions that
    corresponds to the ex-socialist countries' desire to enter the world
    of global capitalism.

    The Caucasus will continue to be a source of irritation for Russia, as
    are many other areas in their relations with powerful states which once
    dominated them. Whether President Saakashvili, as leader of a small,
    geopolitically strategic state, has overplayed his hand in anticipation
    of assistance from the United States is an issue being raised now in
    the latter country itself. His appeal to the world that the Russian
    movement into South Ossetia, and now Abzakhia, is similar to Hitler's
    takeover of Austria and invasion of Czechoslovakia, has not rung a
    bell. The search for effective alliances by small countries in the
    new multipolar world conditions of today, remains a major challenge.
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