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Ossetia War: Lessons For Armenia

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  • Ossetia War: Lessons For Armenia

    OSSETIA WAR: LESSONS FOR ARMENIA
    by Emil Sanamyan

    AZG Armenian Daily
    26/08/2008

    Regional

    WASHINGTON - Within hours the long-running stand-off between Georgia
    and Russia-backed South Ossetia became a full-blown war causing
    hundreds of deaths and thousands of injuries, primarily among Ossetians
    but also among the now-decimated Georgian army.

    The fighting took place less than 100 miles from Armenia and had an
    immediate impact on it. Above all, it exposed the security vacuum in
    the region, of which Armenia is also a part.

    Is Armenia ready for a repetition of a similar scenario in Karabakh?

    Immediate consequences of Ossetia fighting

    Half the world away - on the other end of Asia - most of the world
    leaders, including President George Bush and Russia's Prime Minister
    Vladimir Putin, gathered for the opening of the Olympic Games. As
    they sat in the VIP seats of the Beijing stadium, Georgia's President
    Mikheil Saakashvili, longtouted as Mr. Bush's foreign policy "success
    story" and a thorn in Mr. Putin's side, threw most of his U.S.-trained
    army into a savage attack on South Ossetia.

    That happened just hours after the Georgian leader, in a televised
    address, promised to cease shelling of the Ossetian capital of
    Tskhinvali, which was surrounded on nearly all sides by Georgian
    military positions. As events unfolded, it became clear that the
    Georgian operation was planned in advance, but its planners had failed
    to anticipate what came next.

    Russia intervened within hours and on a massive scale. Had it
    not been for that intervention, which resulted in a defeat of the
    "NATO standard" Georgian army within 48 hours, and subsequent Western
    diplomacy to check Russian military moves within Georgia, large-scale
    fighting might well have claimed even more lives.

    Nevertheless, the three days of shelling and shooting resulted in
    nearly a wholesale destruction of Tskhinvali - a town about the size
    of Stepanakert - and displacement of close to 100,000 people, both
    Ossetians and Georgians.

    The rapid pace of these events, the human toll involved, the apparent
    shifts in the regional balance of forces and, above all, Armenians'
    security predicament in Nagorno-Karabakh necessitate an urgent review
    of Yerevan's policies.

    Lesson 1: Ethnic hatreds and advanced weapons make for a deadly mix

    Mr. Saakashvili studied in some of the best schools in Europe and the
    United States. He has made it clear that he wants Georgia to be part
    of Europe. Georgia has already adopted the European Union flag. While
    his record on corruption and democracy in Georgia is checkered,
    under the Saakashvili presidency, Georgia has made obvious progress.

    None of this stopped the Georgian president from launching a massive
    indiscriminate bombardment of South Ossetia and an attempt to wipe
    out both its small self-defense forces and, effectively, the fewer
    than 70,000 ethnic Ossetians living in the area.

    Now let's look at Azerbaijan. It has much more money and more deadly
    firepower than Georgia did before this week. Azerbaijan's ruling family
    does not care much for promoting democratic facades or currying Western
    favor, and it has repeatedly for years threatened to attack Armenia
    (including the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic).

    This combination of capability and stated intent creates an immediate
    present danger to Armenian lives and must be appreciated more
    seriously and addressed more effectively than has happened to date
    both in Armenia and the diaspora.

    The quick and devastating defeat of a country that, like Azerbaijan,
    sought to "restore its territorial integrity," or more accurately
    avenge old grievances through fresh violence only to bring new
    humiliation upon itself, should serve as a cold shower for Azerbaijan.

    But Armenians cannot rely on President Ilham Aliyev's rational
    cost-benefit calculation. The risks are just too high. Considering the
    levels of anti-Armenian rhetoric - which are beyond anything Georgia's
    leaders have ever employed vis-a-vis Ossetians, Abkhaz, or Russians -
    Mr. Aliyev or, to borrow from the words of the Russian president,
    another "lunatic" Azerbaijani leader may feel the "need to shed
    [Armenian] blood" overwhelm other cares he or she might have.

    The threat is real and must be addressed.

    Lesson 2: Crisis preparations are necessary before a crisis arrives

    Still, most Armenians - and this is especially true for the diaspora
    and Yerevan - live in a blissful ignorance of threats their homeland
    and their lives are facing.

    Even among professional individuals whose job it is to protect Armenia
    and neutralize its enemies, one frequently observes the attitude that
    Azerbaijan either "doesn't have the balls," "doesn't have the army,"
    "won't risk losing oil," or "the United States and Russia won't stand
    for it."

    After the Georgian attack on Ossetia, the Armenian government needs
    to answer a number of key questions.

    Does it consider losing hundreds, if not thousands of civilians
    within a matter of hours, an acceptable risk? Azerbaijan today has
    the capability to cause such destruction.

    What is it doing to stop the flow of weapon systems to Azerbaijan -
    particularly the type of weapons that can cause such devastating
    harm? Like Georgia, Azerbaijan gets most of its weapons, including
    the more deadly ones, from one state - another Western darling,
    Ukraine. What has Armenia done to try to stop and reverse this process?

    Has the Armenian government made it clear to Azerbaijan that it
    would too pay a disproportionate price for causing Armenian civilian
    deaths? How has that been demonstrated?

    What has the Armenian government done to prepare its population for
    a possible attack?

    Do Armenians sitting in Yerevan cafés, chewing sunflower seeds at
    opposition rallies, or watching television in their homes know the
    location of the nearest bomb shelter?

    When were Armenian reservists last gathered on any significant
    scale? When were they last trained or tested? Do they know where to
    report in case of war?

    Crisis requires more than planning for immediate security and military
    operations. Considering the rapid nature of warfare today, once again
    demonstrated in Ossetia, and the role public opinion plays in shaping
    policy, preparations for crisis management must include a strong
    media component.

    Are Armenian-Americans ready for such a crisis?

    Lesson 3: External guarantees carry unacceptable risks

    The main reason Georgians thought they could attack Ossetia with
    impunity is because as part of the peace agreement the parties signed
    after their brief 1991-92 war, Ossetians had to yield firing positions
    they captured from Georgians to Russian peacekeepers.

    Before the August 8 Georgian assault, Russian peacekeepers repeatedly
    failed to address recurring violations by Georgia of its agreements
    and provide for the security of the Ossetian population. As a result,
    even if Russia intervened faster than anticipated, Ossetian civilians
    bore the brunt of human casualties and material losses, with their
    community devastated.

    Armenia too experienced "peacekeeping" of Soviet Russian forces when
    they were sent to "protect" the Armenian-Azerbaijani border in the
    late 1980s. By 1991, on orders from Moscow, went as far as to help
    Azerbaijan expel Armenians from parts of Karabakh.

    But this is not a Russia-specific problem.

    Too many United Nations peacekeeping operations in recent years -
    from Croatia and Rwanda in the mid-1990s, to more recent NATO policing
    in Kosovo and African Union operations in Sudan have failed in their
    stated effort to protect populations whose lives are threatened.

    The reality is the peacekeepers and the countries that dispatch them
    care more about their own security than a foreign country they have
    pledged to protect.

    Armenians are fortunate that foreign peacekeepers were never introduced
    after the Karabakh war ended in 1994. Combat capabilities of the
    Armenian Armed Forces along with the territories they currently
    hold in and around Nagorno Karabakh form two basic foundations of
    Armenian security.

    Lesson 4: The "peace process" must be about strengthening peace and
    preventing war

    Exchanging territories under Armenian control for promises of
    foreign protection without a clear and unambiguous resolution of the
    Armenian-Azerbaijan dispute carries deadly risks for Armenians.

    But, with the possible exception of the 2001 Key West deal, this is
    exactly what mediators have proposed throughout the conflict mediation
    efforts that followed the 1994 cease-fire.

    This clear and unambiguous document must establish a new border
    between the two countries and a transparent process of disarmament
    and demilitarization. Clearly at this time Azerbaijan is not ready for
    such a resolution and would rather protract the status quo. But, under
    such circumstances, neither should it receive any of the territories
    now under Armenian control.

    In fact, in recent years, in addition to a refusal to talk peace
    seriously, Azerbaijan has been following a policy of provocations
    and testing Armenian positions along the Line of Contact, just as
    Georgia had in South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

    The central focus of Armenia's foreign policy should not be the
    endless search for a "mutually acceptable" settlement with Azerbaijan,
    but urgent measures to prevent a repetition of the Ossetia events,
    only on a more devastating scale between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    This must include strengthening of the cease-fire with Azerbaijan
    through an expansion of the unarmed international monitoring mission;
    enforcement of the 1995 agreement on preventing violations of the
    ceasefire; Azerbaijani pull-out from the no-man's lands it occupied
    in recent years dangerously nearing Armenian defense lines; and
    development of an agreement on the peaceful settlement of the conflict
    that would include specific disarmament clauses.

    As Russia's retired Ambassador Vladimir Kazimirov has warned
    repeatedly, and most recently just three months ago at a conference
    in Stepanakert, an Armenian campaign for peace, involving the elements
    listed, is urgently needed.

    Lesson 5: The regional balance of forces has shifted

    After years of confused and contradictory policies and an often simply
    disinterested attitude toward the Caucasus, Russia is back with guns
    blazing. This is not a Soviet monster, but a new country that very
    much is trying to be a copycat of the United States, at least in its
    foreign policy.

    Russian propaganda about Ossetia in recent weeks would remind American
    viewers of what they saw on the eve of and during the Iraq war,
    including references to humanitarian causes and legal grounding for
    the intervention, and demonization of the opponent's leadership.

    In another sign of increased sophistication, Russian armed forces in
    their Georgia operations have succeeded in limiting the "collateral
    damage" the air strikes inevitably cause.

    The Russian command even accommodated the request of the local
    officials in the town of Poti, and instead of air strikes on the U.S.-
    and European-equipped Georgian navy, Russian military men arrived in
    person to dynamite and sink Georgian naval vessels at sea at a safe
    distance away from the port.

    Even more impressive was Russia's ability to deceive Mr. Saakashvili
    and his U.S. supporters. The apparent trap Russia set for the Georgian
    army in Ossetia followed by a wholesale dismantlement of the Georgian
    military - for which the United States spent a billion dollars or
    more since 2001 - showed the Russian leadership's new-found ability
    to fuse its resource-driven enrichment with inherited intellectual
    capacities into an effective conduct of war.

    Signs that the United States is losing its "unipolar moment," as some
    U.S. commentators have described America's dominance in world affairs
    since the collapse of the USSR, have been there for some time.

    After becoming bogged down in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Bush
    Administration has so far failed to achieve its goal of confronting
    Iran effectively. Iran's neighbors, even the two occupied by the United
    States, have publicly declined involvement in anti-Iranian policies.

    And earlier this year even Israel has for the first time began direct
    contacts with Iranbacked Hezbollah in Lebanon and, through Turkey's
    mediation, resumed talks with Syria.

    And this week Turkey, a longtime, but by now apparently former
    U.S. ally, reportedly declined access to U.S. naval vessels into the
    Black Sea to deliver aid to Georgia.

    Armenia has benefited greatly from its relations with the United
    States.

    But America's contribution to Georgia's assault on Ossetia raises
    troubling questions. In fact, as the Ossetians were being devastated
    on the night of August 8, Assistant Secretary of State Dan Fried
    accused them of "provoking" the Georgian aggression and to this day
    there has been no clear American condemnation of the Georgian action.

    The major lesson of Ossetia war is that Russia, Armenia's strategic
    partner, is capable of conducting destructive military operations
    against a purported U.S. ally in the Caucasus, and U.S. is powerless
    to stop Russia.

    Armenia's relationship with Russia has been longer and, on the balance,
    may be even more positive than with the U.S. But Armenia is also
    troubled that Russia is now essentially dismantling the Georgian
    state - one of Armenia's two oldest and friendliest neighbors.

    In these unfortunate circumstances, Armenia should try to contribute to
    normalization of Russian-Georgian relations by all possible means. But
    more importantly it should act on lessons learned from this crisis
    to safeguard Armenians.

    --Boundary_(ID_dYDXaJTHU2h/4XPmPFa1yA) --
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