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  • What To Do Now In Georgia

    WHAT TO DO NOW IN GEORGIA
    Ian Williams

    Foreign Policy In Focus
    www.fpif.org
    Aug 19 2008

    There are no saints and even fewer geniuses in the conflict between
    Russia and Georgia over Ossetia. However, Russian Prime Minister
    Vladimir Putin, clearly the real power in Moscow, has certain proven
    himself even less saintly than other parties - and in the long term,
    less clever. Albeit with serious input from American miscalculations
    and atavistic politics and with the help of the hapless Georgian
    leader Mikheil Saakashvili, Putin has made both Russia, and the world,
    a more dangerous place.

    That is not because of any great conspiracy, but rather a concatenation
    of expedient stupidities on all sides, exacerbated by the tendency of
    all American administrations since Reagan to treat Russia as a defeated
    power rather than a partner. Russian leaders began the elder George
    Bush's New World Order with unprecedented gestures of cooperation,
    around the first Gulf War, for example. Washington's triumphalist
    approach since would have provoked any regime in Moscow, let alone
    one led by a KGB/Mafia consortium, to nationalist reaction.

    Some conspiracy theorists see a pipeline beneath every recent front
    line. In Georgia, a real one runs from Baku to Ceyhan in Turkey,
    whose sole and explicitly announced purpose was to get oil from the
    Caspian that did not have to go through Russian territory. Of course,
    it also made Turkey and its Israeli friends very happy. But alienating
    even a faded nuclear superpower to make two dependent states happy
    is not a statesmanlike thing to do.

    The United Nations has largely been absent from the conflict between
    Russia and Georgia. There were Russian and not UN peacekeepers deployed
    in South Ossetia, and there was little discussion in the Security
    Council about either Georgia's attack on the enclave or Russia's
    response. Any durable peace in the region, however, will require some
    role for the UN. There is some real potential. The United States under
    Bush, while paying lip disservice to the organization, has been using
    it tacitly and widely. Russia, as one would expect from a weaker power,
    often invokes the organization, even if its adherence to UN principles
    has been as much, if not even more, expedient than Washington's.

    Unfinished Business As an organization of sovereign states,
    albeit committed to over-arching humanitarian principles, the UN is
    confronted with "Uncle Joe's Jigsaw." The ex-Soviet republics were
    born with often calculatedly capricious boundaries that Stalin had
    established. As Boris Yeltsin took over after the Soviet Union's
    official dissolution, he doubtless expected to reconstitute the
    union under some form or other. Polls across the former Soviet
    Union showed quite strong support for maintaining the union in some
    form. It would have helped defuse the economic and political shock of
    the Soviet Union's collapse if Russia had promoted dual or multiple
    nationalities, freedom of movement and employment, a common currency,
    a free trade area, and the maintenance of joint enterprises across
    state boundaries. None of that happened. Instead, most of the new
    states had independence - and authoritarian regimes - thrust upon
    them. What had been administrative boundaries became concrete and
    barbed wire, regardless of economic and ethnic realities.

    Putin's rhetorical and military over-reaction to events in Georgia has
    scuppered any likelihood of reconstruction of the defunct Commonwealth
    of Independent States on the lines of the European Union. Russia's
    attack has made NATO expansion all the more likely, and leaders of the
    ex-Soviet states immediately showed their colors by making solidarity
    visits to Tbilisi.

    The Kremlin's strategy in Georgia is likely to come back to haunt
    it. If there is one country that has much to fear from unbridled
    secessionism it is the Russian Federation, where Russians are a rapidly
    decreasing majority. Legitimizing the secession of Abkhazia and Ossetia
    strengthens the case of the Chechens and numerous other claimants to
    independence or simply greater autonomy. And challenging the former
    Soviet boundaries opens the way to future conflicts, not just between
    Russia and its neighbors, but among the neighbors themselves.

    Quite apart from any suspicions of Moscow's ulterior motives, the
    undisciplined behavior of Russian troops in Georgia, as documented
    by human rights workers and the journalists who witnessed the Russian
    assault, did not win hearts and minds in their field of operations. It
    certainly belies Moscow's weasel words about humanitarian interests.

    Humanitarian Intervention The Canadian-convened Commission on the
    Responsibility to Protect, the doctrine of humanitarian intervention
    adopted at the 60th anniversary summit of the United Nations, was
    quite clear about how dangerous a concept it could be when used
    expediently. When the doctrine was first raised in modern times in
    response to Saddam Hussein's brutal assault on the Kurds, international
    lawyers at the UN quietly mentioned that one of the precedents was
    Adolf Hitler's invocation of humanitarian intervention to "save"
    the Sudeten Germans and justify the invasion of Czechoslovakia.

    Sadly, there were shades of that expediency in Moscow's declaration
    that it was intervening on humanitarian grounds. Handing out Russian
    passports to the Ossetian citizens of Georgia could be taken as a
    humanitarian gesture - unless one takes into account the difficulties
    encountered by ethnic Russians and other Soviet citizens marooned
    in other ex-Soviet Republics in getting the same documents. As for
    coming to the rescue of their Ossetian brethren, Human Rights Watch
    and journalists on the ground have cast considerable doubt on whether
    nearly so many people as Russia claimed were killed in Georgia's
    initial, unjustifiable attack.

    Russia has followed the Kosovo script, almost recycling
    the same rhetoric the United States used to justify the 1999
    intervention. However while Putin did not succeed in getting UN
    authorization for military intervention,- there are no records of any
    CIS meeting to consider the reaction of the Russian peacekeepers it
    nominally controls, unlike the long discussions Blair and Clinton had
    that won round NATO members. By going beyond Ossetian boundaries and
    papering over the brutalities of Ossetian militia, Moscow has seriously
    compromised its case, quite apart from the implicit doublethink of
    advocating in Ossetia the principles it repudiates in Kosovo.

    Russia has claimed that its forces in Abkhazia, Ossetia, and
    Transdneister are the equivalent of UN peacekeepers. The first has
    a UN blue fig leaf, the other two have none. Of course the Russians
    are not alone in their expediency. The UN resolutions that mandated
    Russian presence in Georgia were the price Bill Clinton paid to
    acquire UN support for U.S. intervention in Haiti.

    It would be simplistic to see Ossetia as payback for Kosovo, but it
    was certainly one element. Russia was clearly humiliated that it
    could not deliver for Serbia, one of the few countries left with
    any respect for the Kremlin. Even though Moscow has often been in
    the wrong, Washington has not seriously tried to engage the Kremlin,
    and its snubs have provoked understandable, if not always justifiable
    reactions. And the United States has often been in the wrong as well.

    The Russian veto at the UN, less frequent but often as unprincipled as
    America's, has been a demand for respect as well as a serious political
    gambit. Neither the French nor the British feel the need to use theirs,
    since they are treated as partners by Washington (albeit very junior
    ones). Russia has not even been given this junior status.

    Although Russians have sent an effective message to their neighbors
    that neither NATO nor the USA can guarantee their safety, the
    strategy is all stick and no carrot. The response of the leaders of
    other ex-Soviet states and the immediate Polish-American agreement
    on missile bases demonstrates how counter-productive the Russian
    action has been. Add to that events in Ukraine, where the former
    Russian anti-missile system is on offer to NATO and the Sevastapol
    Russian Navy base has been called in question, and Moscow has actually
    consolidated an anti-Russian alliance.

    Was this the covert plan of the United States: to provoke Georgia to
    attack South Ossetia, knowing that Russia would respond, and thereby
    create anti-Russian solidarity among its neighbors? When April Glaspie
    passed on Washington's advice to Saddam Hussein that the United States
    did not take sides in the dispute, she did not expect him to invade
    Kuwait. It seems equally unlikely that the White House support for
    their latest man in Tbilisi was intended to encourage him to respond so
    vigorously. Some people in the Bush administration may have encouraged
    Saakashvili in his impetuousness. There are neocons around who are
    detached enough from reality to think that the United States could
    face Russia down and welcome the chance to humiliate the old enemy -
    but they are clearly not in the State Department at the moment.

    Conversely, the readiness of Russian troops and the reported
    provocation by Ossetian militias could have been a trap sprung
    on the hapless Saakashvili. On the other hand Moscow's calling of
    an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council and its seemingly
    exaggerated casualty figures could have been the result of credulity
    on its part in the face of manipulation by the KGB/Mafia figures who
    control South Ossetia.

    It would be marginally more reassuring if the conflict had been caused
    by the irrationalities of local leaders on both sides, rather than
    by cold war calculations in either Moscow or Washington. That would
    at least imply that there was a basis for getting the parties to the
    negotiating table before matters escalate.

    The Future With even Germany now supporting extension of NATO to
    include countries with unresolved issues such as the enclaves in
    Georgia and even the Crimea, an action replay of 1939 threatens. Just
    as a bedrock principle of the African Union was acceptance of existing
    colonial boundaries, there were good reasons not to open the Pandora's
    box of redrawing Stalin's cartographic caprice.

    Even so, however, there is room for legitimate mutually agreed boundary
    revisions, for example between Azerbaijan and Armenia. The Russians
    do have a point that self-determination is an important principle,
    even if they tend to ignore the detail that Abkhaz self-determination
    was a case of a minority expelling the majority.

    Any U.S. administration that can restrain its scruples enough to deal
    with the House of Saud, or Pervez Musharraf can do business with Putin,
    or maybe even with Medvedev when we have sorted out if he is more
    than a ventriloquist's dummy. Europe, despite its frequent diplomatic
    paraplegia can play a constructive role, and in fact already has done
    so by inhibiting NATO's pull to the west.

    Washington should begin by taking its declared European allies such as
    Germany and France seriously to work out a shared approach, and then
    jointly talking with Russia to build a framework to handle problems
    in the region. But any accommodation to the Russians (or indeed the
    Georgians) has to preclude the use of military force. In the Georgian
    enclaves, the Russian military are clearly part of the problem, not
    the solution. They need to be replaced with real peacekeepers who can
    guarantee the return of refugees and replace the KGB/Mafia rule in
    the enclaves. Certainly Russian monitors should be part of the force,
    but the substantial elements should come from elsewhere and be under
    actual UN auspices.

    Ban Ki Moon is not the type to use a bully pulpit, which is a shame
    since all sides deserve a hard talking to. However, Moon's customary
    low profile does allow some possibilities for his "good offices."Some
    form of UN mission could allow both sides to descend with dignity from
    the poles they have climbed. A good example would be the brokering
    role the UN played in ending the Iran-Iraq war. Such quiet diplomacy,
    in concert with UN monitors and peacekeepers, could produce a durable
    settlement without asking any of the parties to eat humble pie.

    Ian Williams is a senior analyst for Foreign Policy In
    Focus (www.fpif.org). More of his work is available on
    www.deadlinepundit.blogspot.com.
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