Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Commentary Blames "War Party" Of Siloviki, Not "Kremlin", For Osseti

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Commentary Blames "War Party" Of Siloviki, Not "Kremlin", For Osseti

    COMMENTARY BLAMES "WAR PARTY" OF SILOVIKI, NOT "KREMLIN", FOR OSSETIAN WAR
    by Dmitriy Butrin

    RedOrbit
    Aug 20 2008
    TX

    "A specific Kremlin"

    The confidence that Russia's actions in the war over South Ossetia
    were controlled from start to finish by the Kremlin and the White
    House [Russian Government] would make it possible to speak of
    the start of radical changes in foreign policy and the transition
    from unprincipled dealings with the theoretical world community to
    certain principles. Unfortunately no such firm confidence exists. And
    there are doubts as to whether the Tskhinvali episode was dumped on
    Medvedev's and Putin's desks by people whom the heads of state simply
    cannot afford not to talk with. These people are not Rice or Angela
    Merkel. Whether or not the Russian Federation Army will leave Georgia
    on schedule depends on them. And only to a lesser extent on Putin's
    subordinate, Defence Minister Anatoliy Serdyukov.

    This is the position of the state

    Russia's position in this war seems attractive by any not-too- strict
    standards. The motive force of the conflict in South Ossetia was
    and is nationalism - first and foremost Georgian nationalism. The
    concept of the territorial integrity of any nation state burdened
    with ethnic minorities, whether it be Russia, Georgia, Armenia,
    Azerbaijan, or France, presupposes that the nation that forms the
    state has state borders that are historically established. A change
    to those borders must be recognized by the state itself or by the
    world community. Despite the widespread popular belief that Mikheil
    Saakashvili's regime is more or less based on anarcho- capitalist
    principles, Georgia has dreamed of regaining its territorial integrity
    ever since losing it in 1991-1992.

    The majority of the 70,000 inhabitants of South Ossetia, since
    1991, would have preferred to live within the State of the Russian
    Federation on their own land, within the bounds known by three
    generations. Nonetheless Russia, for its own reasons, maintained the
    status quo, formulated as follows: In South Ossetia, Ossetian villages
    live under local self-government as part of the Russian Federation,
    and Georgian villages live as part of Georgia.

    The tripartite commission consisting of the military from Georgia and
    the Russian Federation and the local self-government of the Russian
    part of South Ossetia monitors the situation to ensure that everything
    stays as it is until such time as something different can be agreed on.

    In this sense all the events in South Ossetia are logical. The
    forcible incorporation of the South Ossetian villages and the urban
    settlement of Tskhinvali into Russia, with legal recognition by the
    Russian Federation, no matter how they may arm themselves, is hardly
    conceivable. The incorporation of the Georgian villages of South
    Ossetia into Georgia has been obvious for a long time.

    Despite having almost unlimited opportunities to resolve the South
    Ossetian issue in its own favour, Russia has not resolved it since
    1992.

    In August 2008 Georgia tried to do just that, and was punished.

    Claims that the Kokoiti [Kokoyty] bandit gang is operating in
    Tskhinvali under Russian patronage, shelling peaceful Georgian
    villages, are feeble. It should be assumed that similar bandit gangs
    are also operating in Georgian villages and cities; this can be
    assumed not only on the grounds that in recent years there have been
    shootings and bombings on both sides, but rather on the grounds that
    Kokoiti's accomplices could only engage in smuggling and car theft
    if they had partners on the Georgian side - the region is primarily
    a transit region. Fine, so Russia armed Kokoiti's provocateurs with
    grenade launchers. And who armed the Georgians?

    There is no point in offering emotional definitions: The aggressor is
    whoever disrupts the equilibrium with violence, no matter how he may
    have been provoked. As long as Russia controls the Ossetian villages
    and Georgia the Georgian villages, the situation can be described as
    normal. Here it really does not matter who started it first, if it all
    started back in 1919. Of course Russia did not resort to international
    mediation over Abkhazia and South Ossetia: As a party to the conflict,
    it would inevitably have lost out in this situation. The "frozen
    conflicts" were frozen by none other than the Russian Federation,
    in the awareness that it simply does not know how to resolve them.

    The present position proclaimed by President Medvedev is also fitting.

    Basically what that position amounts to is that everything is returning
    to normal in South Ossetia.

    Talks about the status of the separatist regions of Georgia are
    being launched at an international level (at the Russian Federation-
    Georgia level they are now pointless and dangerous), and the only
    ones to suffer are the Georgian military, who are unable to station
    their subunits in the Georgian part of South Ossetia and in Kodori. In
    fact, even before, they did not have the right to do that, or no right
    that was recognized outside Georgia. So in effect not much will have
    changed as from Monday.

    This is the private war of Eduard Kokoiti's patrons

    All these considerations are evidently entitled to exist if there is a
    satisfactory answer to the question: When we say "Russia" whom do we
    have in mind? If "Russia" in this case means the "power hierarchy,"
    the state apparatus, or at least the Kremlin, it would be possible
    to drop the idea that they were the ones who provoked the war over
    South Ossetia. Within the "six principles" format it is not very clear
    what Russia as a state might have gained, apart from international
    problems, dead citizens, and the strengthening of the pro-Russian
    regimes in Abkhazia and South Ossetia. These last were anyway facing
    no particular threats before the incidents. In this case Russia has
    shown a principled approach for the first time in foreign policy,
    and that will pay for itself.

    But I suggest that it was certainly not Russia that plunged into a new
    Caucasus conflict, but only a small section of its state apparatus,
    the section that gained from it - that is obviously what Mrs Rice is
    hinting at when she expresses the hope that the Russian Federation's
    military formations will fulfil President Dmitriy Medvedev's
    instruction to leave Georgia's territory.

    There is reason to believe that the provocations in South Ossetia
    to which the ordinary nationalistic politician Mikheil Saakashvili
    succumbed were not the responsibility of an abstract Kremlin, but of
    people in the Russian Federation's security agencies who continue to
    control the Eduard Kokoiti regime. That is, the "security cover" of
    Ossetian South Ossetia, which makes no great secret of its provenance
    from among Russian military and special service cadres. Proceeding on
    the basis of what we know about what happened previously in the Russian
    part of the North Caucasus, support for the ideas of separatism and
    irredenta is somewhat unexpected for a state with the experience
    of Chechnya. It is possible to find an explanation that is much
    simpler and much worse than one might assume, simply by analysing
    the international situation.

    For states, wars are a headache, because they make national
    currencies collapse, frighten off investors, and do long-term damage
    to politicians' popularity ratings.

    For the Russian siloviki [security chiefs], who since 1995 have grown
    accustomed throughout the North Caucasus to accumulating resources
    for the stabilization of the situation, the restoration of damage,
    and the maintenance of the security level, war is a feeding ground.

    In this light there is nothing surprising about Chechen President
    Ramzan Kadyrov's delight at the events or about the absence of any
    rejoicing at the Ossetians' liberation among the governments of the
    fraternal North Caucasus peoples within the Russian Federation. For
    Kadyrov, a new field of activity for the counterterrorist staff for the
    North Caucasus, headed by the FSB, means a lessening of pressure on him
    in Chechnya and less competition for his people. But for Ingushetia,
    for instance, which has been in a state of conflict with what is now
    de facto a united Ossetia for as long as Ossetia has been in a state
    of conflict with Georgia, there is no reason to be pleased if that
    territory is turned from a war zone into a border zone. The same is
    true for Ossetia. The only winners are those who accumulate the funds
    for the restoration of South Ossetia and for regional security under
    the protection of the siloviki, who since the victorious pacification
    of Chechnya in 2000 have seen their feeding ground shrink year by
    year. Now that ground is widening.

    This is a silovik group that has sufficient political influence to
    insist on the replacement of the General Staff leadership in the summer
    of 2008, to effectively rebuff all attacks on Ingushetian leader Murat
    Zyazikov, and in many conflicts to successfully oppose the official
    siloviki in the Putin government, including Minister Serdyukov. Happily
    for us, they are not very interested in international policy or
    official power.

    Very little indeed is known about this "combat brotherhood" - at
    least since February 2004, when I wrote in this column about the
    military-criminal economy surrounding Chechnya, these people have
    not become public.

    Everything that is more or less known indicates that they are
    interested almost exclusively in money and in guarantees of the
    preservation of their feeding ground in their base regions. These are
    mainly border territories, as well as parts of the Volga, Far East,
    and Nonchernozem. I will not even venture to say whether they are
    united: Maybe their coordinated actions are based on a coalition
    deal between individuals in uniform. But the fact that they exist
    can hardly be disputed anymore.

    The "war party" in the Russian political spectrum is invisible, but
    its presence is required in order to explain what has been happening
    in the regime in recent years.

    Those who are customarily regarded as siloviki in the present White
    House, including [Deputy Prime Minister] Igor Sechin, not infrequently
    come into conflict with this "war party."

    One day - and quite soon - these people will want more than
    noninterference in their affairs on the part of Medvedev. It was no
    accident that Condoleezza Rice expressed the hope that the Russian
    troops will leave Georgia anyway, but where will they want to go
    in a year or two? Into the mining industry? To Crimea? Into North
    Kazakhstan? To Tbilisi again? Or to Staraya Square [headquarters of
    Presidential Staff]?

    But that is the internal affair of the Kremlin, which is prepared to
    recognize them as equal partners in its domestic political game.

    [Description of Source: Moscow Gazeta.ru WWW-Text in Russian - Popular
    website owned by pro-Kremlin and Gazprom-linked businessman Usmanov
    but still often critical of the government; URL: www.gazeta.ru]
Working...
X