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Russia In The Caucasus; Russia's Oil

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  • Russia In The Caucasus; Russia's Oil

    RUSSIA IN THE CAUCASUS; RUSSIA'S OIL

    IHT
    August 28, 2008

    Russia in the Caucasus

    The Russians and the Georgians have long had a testy relationship. The
    Russians absorbed Georgia, along with Armenia and Azerbaijan, into the
    trans-Caucasus region of the old Russian Empire in the first decades
    of the 19th century. The Bolsheviks invaded in 1921 and annexed
    the independent statelet into the Soviet Union for the next several
    decades. So, sadly, Russian suppression of Georgia is nothing new.

    The Soviets were more interested in forging a buffer for their
    Communist state while also creating like-minded Socialist governments
    along their borders. Lenin and Stalin struck against neighbors in
    order to give the Russian Communist regime space and time to evolve.

    In terms of geopolitics, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin thinks like
    Lenin and Stalin. He foresees the recreation of a Russian Empire
    with client states that allow Russia to pump oil and gas and control
    the region.

    In Georgia, Putin appears to have won in the short-term. But he should
    remember what happened to comrades Lenin and Trotsky when they invaded
    Poland, which struck back and knocked the Red Army out of the country.

    Russia's actions in Georgia might stoke resistance and separatist
    sentiment within Russia itself.

    Independence for Abkhazia and South Ossetia would not resolve
    very much. The bulk of Abkhaz and South Ossetian grievances
    stem from the fact that they have been in political and economic
    isolation despite being functional de facto governments since the
    early 1990s. Unrepresented internationally and with no diplomatic
    relations, the Abkhaz and South Ossetian governments have turned to
    Russia for support.

    The solution to the conflict may be simpler than it seems. The
    diplomatic dilemma here is not between independence and territorial
    integrity. Rather, it is in the gray area between statehood and
    isolation. The international community, in this conflict and in others,
    must find a way to engage nonstate actors and de facto governments in
    international human rights forums, diplomatic negotiations, at the UN,
    and in international law.

    The violence in the Caucasus is a reflection of the sorry state of
    affairs for millions of unrepresented groups in the world. It is
    only when states learn to engage nonstate actors diplomatically,
    without being alarmed by calls for separatism and independence,
    that there can be a lasting solution here.

    Judy Fu, The Hague Secretariat, Unrepresented Nations and Peoples
    Organization

    Russia's oil

    The article "Let oil flow to Czechs, Putin says" (July 22) is
    inaccurate in suggesting that Gunvor trades oil through the Druzhba
    pipeline. Currently, Gunvor has no contract for supply on the Druzhba
    pipeline and has not traded any volumes through the pipeline in
    question for at least two years.

    Dirk Jonker, Amsterdam Managing director, Gunvor International
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