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In The Jaws Of The Bear

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  • In The Jaws Of The Bear

    IN THE JAWS OF THE BEAR
    by Mindy Belz

    World Magazine
    http://www.worldmag.com/articles/14348
    Au g 29 2008
    NC

    Georgia: With a weak allied response, Russia extends its reach
    into Georgia

    As Russia continued to escalate the conflict with the West over
    its invasion of Georgia, words seemed to fail. "Russia recognizes
    breakaway Georgia regions" is how most wire services headlined the
    Aug. 26 vote by Russia's parliament to, in effect, begin a process
    of annexation of the pro-Russia regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia
    in Georgia. The Associated Press called them "rebel regions."

    By unilaterally declaring independence for two regions within another
    country's borders, the Russian government began yet another advance: to
    negotiate a separate peace with these areas and to continue supplying
    them while Georgia proper faces $1 billion in damages from Russia's
    five-day invasion and a Russian blockade on aid. Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice called Moscow's decision to claim independence for
    the two enclaves "extremely unfortunate." Later she said Moscow's
    actions were "regrettable."

    Western leaders are at a loss for words to deal with what is arguably
    a crisis nearly a month after Russia's surprise invasion of Georgia
    and over a week after Moscow failed to comply with terms of withdrawal
    contained in a signed ceasefire agreement. Instead, in a page from
    the satirical Onion--which famously reported, "in other news . . . an
    earthquake wiped out much of Etchasketchistan"--the West seems resigned
    to see Moscow erase parts of Georgia's borders. Russian occupation
    of Georgia's Black Sea port at Poti forced U.S. naval vessels loaded
    with humanitarian supplies twice, on Aug. 24 and Aug. 27, to dock
    south of war-damaged areas at Batumi.

    And Russia's August march into Georgia now seems more premeditated
    than ever: Its forces quickly subdued Georgian units in South Ossetia
    and it launched a three-day aerial assault on Kodori Gorge, giving
    Abkhaz troops an opportunity to seize the agriculture-rich region that
    is the gateway to Abkhazia. Along the way Russian forces managed to
    hamper or shut down Georgia's oil and gas pipelines.

    Summarizing the helplessness many feel in Eastern Europe and among
    the former Soviet satellites, an editorial in a Latvian newspaper
    concluded: "Russia took what it could take."

    Experts on the region, however, point out that the start of Russian
    designs in Georgia extend well back of its Aug. 8 invasion. Georgia
    is the birthplace of Joseph Stalin, and the Communist leader long
    ago redrafted Georgian borders and forcibly mixed the area ethnically
    as part of his plan to make a new nation of "Soviets." Abkhazia, in
    fact, is now majority Armenian run by a small minority of pro-Moscow
    Abkhazians. South Ossetia, meanwhile, is at least one-fourth Georgian
    (and many human-rights groups remain unsure of their present status
    after Russia's military blocked the region last month from monitors
    and journalists).

    In 1991-93, with Georgia asserting its independence from the
    disintegrating Soviet Union, Moscow officials showed up in Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia to dispense Russian passports, according to Yuri Maltsev,
    economics professor at Wisconsin's Carthage College and a leading
    researcher at the Academy of Sciences in Moscow before he defected in
    1989. "They carried Polaroid cameras to make issuing passports easy,"
    he said. That was the first step to sowing seeds of strife within
    Georgia. Later the UN also upped the tension by giving to Russia a
    mandate of providing peacekeepers to the--not surprisingly--restive
    provinces. "That is the same as giving a goat a mandate to protect
    a cabbage," said Maltsev. Russian president Dmitry Medvedev has used
    that mandate to keep "peacekeeping" troops on the ground in Georgia
    beyond an Aug. 16 truce.

    What's next? Maltsev says Abkhazia and South Ossetia will now apply
    for membership in the Russian Federation. With Russian troops in
    control of both areas, it could remain difficult if not impossible
    for outsiders to assess the fate of residents in the two regions who
    lack Russian citizenship or other ties to Moscow.

    And faith-based groups in the region are feeling pressure to keep
    quiet also. Wheaton-based Russian Ministries has worked among Ossetian
    churches, but spokesman Jean Zatulovsky told WORLD last week: "Because
    of the sensitivity of the situation we are unable to give information
    about the situation or our work there."

    Western leaders are similarly hamstrung. "All of the West has been
    so busy post-9/11 with how to address asymmetrical warfare. Suddenly
    we are faced with a conventional threat and our capacity to meet
    it has suffered," said Sally McNamara, senior policy analyst at the
    Heritage Foundation.

    "What you are seeing is a huge divergence between Old Europe and New
    Europe," said McNamara. Central and Eastern European countries of
    New Europe "see the real threat" of Russian aggression, she said,
    but Western European nations, with backing from the United States,
    put intervention off the table weeks ago. Both U.S. Defense Secretary
    Robert Gates and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, with Russian
    troops still occupying Georgian cities, ruled out military action in
    mid-August. Said McNamara: "One thing that has become very clear is
    that countries like Russia are willing to engage in something very
    old-fashioned--military confrontation--and European military capacity
    is degraded to the point it cannot respond."

    Key dates in the Georgia-Russia crisis Aug. 7: Georgia launches an
    offensive to seize control of South Ossetia, a province that broke
    from Georgia in the early 1990s.

    Aug. 8: Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili says most of South
    Ossetia has been "liberated." Russia sends tanks and troops, promising
    to defend its peacekeeping troops and residents with Russian passports.

    Aug. 9: Russian warplanes bomb targets in Georgia including the Black
    Sea port of Poti. This is followed by aerial assaults on the city
    of Gori and near the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline. Russia
    also launched a three-day air attack on Kodori Gorge, linking the
    territory of Abkhazia to Georgia.

    Aug. 10: After claiming control of most of South Ossetia, Russia
    starts bombing areas near the Georgian capital Tbilisi for the first
    time, targeting a military airfield. Georgia admits losing the South
    Ossetian capital of Tskhinvali.
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