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TBILISI: Stability platform rumours rise again

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  • TBILISI: Stability platform rumours rise again

    The Messenger , Georgia
    Dec 30 2008

    Stability platform rumours rise again

    By Messenger Staff
    Tuesday, December 30


    In the summer when the Russian invasion was at its peak it was
    announced that the Turkish leadership had suggested a new political
    formula ` a platform in the Caucasus guaranteeing peace, stability and
    security in the region. Now it is again reported that the document is
    being discussed and getting ready to be signed. However Georgian
    political analysts and journalists are emphasizing that they don't
    know the detailed text of this platform and therefore cannot comment
    on the pros and cons of it.

    Any kind of agreement which guarantees peace and stability in the
    region is welcome, but it is regretted that the Georgian Foreign
    Ministry did not provide a timely Georgian translation of the document
    and moreover, did not provide more details of it. What we do know
    however is that the Turkish initiative envisages the document being
    signed by Turkey, Russia and the three South Caucasus States. Even
    this creates an awkward situation. Several entities who claim to have
    a legitimate interest in this region, such as Iran, the EU and the
    USA, appear to be excluded from the agreement and this may impact on
    their attitude towards the countries that sign it and the assistance
    they might be willing to give to states which thereby do not take
    their interests into account.

    In 1922 an agreement was signed in Kars which was controversial and
    did not leave any of the South Caucasus states very happy. Today the
    situation is even more complicated. Russia has introduced two puppet
    states into the region by snatching Georgian territories ` the
    so-called Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Of course Moscow will try to
    legalize these fictions by fixing their puppet leaders' signatures on
    the document. This will not be accepted by Georgia, and we can say
    this with 100 % confidence. Hopefully none of the parties to the
    platform would support Moscow if it tried to take this initiative,
    assuming there was only one version of the document, and everyone knew
    who had signed it, which is something no one can now be sure of after
    what happened with the Sarkozy-brokered ceasefire document in August.

    Turkey is most likely interested in promoting its economic interests
    above all by guaranteeing an uninterrupted flow of Caspian Basin
    energy to the West via Turkey. It also wants to claim leadership in
    the region and possibly untie the Karabakh knot and reconcile
    Azerbaijan and Armenia. However Turkey understands that it cannot do
    all this alone, without Russia, which is openly stating its dubious
    militarily claims in the Caucasus which do not square with being part
    of an agreement signed by Turkey, Russia, Azerbaijan, Armenia and
    Georgia. The Kremlin has also tried to resolve Karabakh problem
    itself, without Turkey. President Medvedev organized a meeting between
    the Azeri and Armenian Presidents in Moscow, though this has had no
    visible results, which might demonstrate that the meeting was just an
    attempt to pretend Russia is a peacemaker, as some said at the time.

    Georgian journalists and political analysts hope that before any
    document is signed its terms will be made public and become a matter
    of expert discussion. This is too important an issue to be entrusted
    to politicians alone, whose judgment on a range of issues has already
    proven fallible. Nor should signing up to a platform end at the
    signing ceremony. The stability of the entire region, our country and
    the welfare of many nations is at stake, and bits of paper achieve
    nothing unless you make them do so.
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