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  • Silence of the Commonwealth

    WPS Agency, Russia
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    August 22, 2008 Friday



    SILENCE OF COMMONWEALTH

    by Yekaterina Barova

    AN UPDATE ON CIS COUNTRIES' REACTION TO THE RUSSIAN-GEORGIAN CLASH;
    Analysis of CIS countries' reaction to the Russian-Georgian clash.

    Belarus

    Minsk's silence in the first days of the Georgian-Ossetian conflict
    was bewildering. Russian Ambassador to Minsk, Alexander Surikov, even
    called a press conference on the subject. It was only on August 13
    that President Alexander Lukashenko cabled his condolences to the
    South Ossetian leadership. No such cable was dispatched to Georgia.

    Moldova

    Moldova backed the European Union and called for a
    cease-fire. Kishinev's official silence is understandable. It has its
    own domestic conflict to deal with, export-import wars to fight, and
    membership in anti-Russian GUAM with Azerbaijan, Ukraine, and Georgia
    to mind.

    Armenia

    Yerevan said in no uncertain terms that it had no intentions to
    withdraw from the Commonwealth (in response to Saakashvili's fiery
    speech). Official reaction at the Foreign Ministry level was fairly
    moderate and considerate. Armenia said it hoped the involved parties
    would concentrate on peaceful settlement.

    Azerbaijan

    With Ilham Aliyev being away in Beijing when bombs and shells started
    raining on Tskhinvali, his political enemies had a field day. These
    latter kept screaming bloody murder about "Russian aggressor", "the
    Caucasus in jeopardy", and so on. Azerbaijani officials released a
    simple statement that reiterated territorial integrity of Georgia but
    never said a word about the Russian military operation.

    Kazakhstan

    President Nursultan Nazarbayev did his best to avoid becoming
    committed in any way and said CIS foreign ministers should sort it
    out. Meeting with Putin in Beijing, Nazarbayev only said the Georgian
    leadership was wrong to have neglected to inform its CIS partners of
    its intentions in advance. On its return home, however, he castigated
    the "amorphousness" of the Commonwealth.

    Kyrgyzstan

    It was Kyrgyzstan as CIS chair-in-office that compelled the CIS
    Collective Security Treaty Organization to officially condemn Georgia
    and its action in the conflict area. A group of Kyrgyz
    parliamentarians and political scientists travelled to the conflict
    area even before the CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization's
    statement, which was apparently a political gesture.

    Ukraine

    President Victor Yuschenko's unconditional support of his Georgian
    counterpart Saakashvili fomented a rift in the Ukraine. Prime Minister
    Yulia Timoshenko was accused of being in a conspiracy with the Kremlin
    (the idea was that Timoshenko wouldn't support Tbilisi in return for
    Moscow's support in the forthcoming presidential election). The Rada
    even appealed to the Ukrainian Security Service to keep an eye on the
    situation with the issuing of Russian passports to citizens of
    Ukraine.

    The leaders of Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan declined
    comment.

    Source: Sobesednik, August 20, 2008, p. 5
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