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Vladimir Socor in EDM: Kosovo and Russia's Bluff in Abkhazia and Sou

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  • Vladimir Socor in EDM: Kosovo and Russia's Bluff in Abkhazia and Sou

    KOSOVAR INDEPENDENCE RECOGNIZED, RUSSIA'S BLUFF CALLED IN ABKHAZIA AND SOUTH OSSETIA
    by Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor -- The Jamestown Foundation
    February 19, 2008 -- Volume 5, Issue 31

    On February 17 Kosova declared officially its independence from
    Serbia. On February 18 the United States and several major European
    countries recognized Kosova as an independent state. More than 20
    (out of 27) European Union member countries are prepared to extend
    recognition.

    Russia anticipated this outcome some weeks, if not months, ahead of
    its occurrence. By the end of 2007 Moscow had started backtracking on
    its retaliatory threats to recognize the "independence" of post-Soviet
    secessionist territories. It had to backtrack, lest its warnings be
    exposed as the bluff they were.

    Moscow's threat to use Kosova's secession as a "precedent" or "model"
    for resolving post-Soviet conflicts was never a credible threat, unless
    the Kremlin was bent on incurring severe damage and no gain to its
    policies on a wide range of interests: Relations with the West, with
    CIS countries (far beyond those immediately affected by secessions)
    and with international organizations, as well as Russia's own security
    situation in the North Caucasus would have been severely jeopardized.

    Those anxious about Russian exploitation of a Kosova "precedent"
    overlooked the fact that Moscow remains more than content to exploit
    the existing, "frozen" situation in the unresolved conflicts. This
    it can continue doing effectively and at low cost to itself, as long
    as the West does not prioritize the resolution of the post-Soviet
    conflicts.

    Indications are now multiplying that Moscow has blinked on its most
    specific threat: that to "recognize the independence" of Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia. Russia had singled out these two Georgian territories as
    prime candidates for "recognition." This line of attack contradicted
    Moscow's own claim that resolution of all secessionist conflicts
    in Europe and the world must follow a "common model" or "single
    standard." In practice, its blatant selectivity about Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia reflected Moscow's special enmity toward Georgia, the
    immediate territorial proximity (whereas Karabakh and Transnistria
    are not contiguous to Russia), and the Russian policy of allowing
    Armenia de facto a free hand in Karabakh, while Moscow claims de
    facto a free hand in the two Georgian territories.

    Largely for those reasons, Moscow had conferred Russian citizenship
    en masse in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, so as to claim a right of
    intrusive protection there, including military presence. At the
    same time it left the issues of citizenship and security protection
    in Karabakh up to Armenia. And it has been negotiating with Moldova
    since 2006 regarding a settlement that would leave Transnistria within
    Moldova, in return for a certain measure of Russian political and
    military oversight over a Moldovan state "reunified" in that way.

    These highly differentiated, expediency-based approaches nullified
    from the outset Russia's argument about a "Kosovo precedent" with
    general applicability. Had it applied such a "precedent" unilaterally
    in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the Kremlin would have been exposed
    as singularizing Georgia and targeting it for a wanton act of
    aggression. With Russian troops and Russian-appointed local leaders
    already deployed in those two enclaves, any Russian "recognition"
    would have been seen worldwide as open military occupation and
    annexation. Moscow did not need to risk such a scenario, since the
    existing unresolved situation suits Russian purposes too well.

    As Kosova's declaration of independence and Western recognition drew
    near, Moscow must have concluded that its threats against Georgia
    were unusable threats. Consequently, Moscow seems to be seeking a
    face-saving exit from a political impasse into which it has driven
    itself. Suddenly the Kremlin is downplaying its all-to-recent,
    dire warnings.

    In his annual news conference (the final one of his presidency)
    on February 14, Russian President Vladimir Putin denounced Western
    intentions to recognize Kosova as "unlawful," and the argument
    about Kosova's uniqueness as (Western) "lies." But Putin went on to
    declare that Russia would not let itself be provoked into similar
    "unlawful" actions: "What will we do if they start recognizing
    Kosovo's independence unilaterally? We are not going to play the
    fool. If someone takes a bad decision it does not mean that we should
    act in the same way. I repeat, we will not play the fool by doing
    the same thing, acting as if this [Russian recognition of post-Soviet
    secessions] is a necessary consequence" (Interfax, February 14).

    On February 15, Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei Lavrov received
    the Abkhaz and South Ossetian de facto leaders, Sergei Bagapsh and
    Eduard Kokoiti, in Moscow. The Russian communiqués referred to them
    as "presidents," by the usage adopted several years ago. Lavrov,
    as well as accompanying statements by the Russian MFA, merely said
    that Russia, in light of Kosova, would "reconsider" (peresmotrit)
    its policy regarding Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Further on the vague
    tone, Russia would "undoubtedly take [Kosova] into account in Russia's
    relations with Abkhazia and South Ossetia" (Interfax, February 15,
    16). Thus Putin's, Lavrov's, and other Russian MFA statements were
    worded so as to stop short of repeating previous warnings about
    recognizing those two secessions.

    On February 18, Russia's Duma and Federation Council released a joint
    statement condemning the Western recognition of Kosova, but stopping
    short of warnings about "recognition" of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

    The Russian parliament had in recent years adopted a series of
    resolutions that contained such warnings. Sukhumi and Tskhinvali
    hoped for more of the same, more than ever now; but they were
    disappointed. Moreover, the joint statement was adopted quietly by
    the two chambers' Councils (leaderships), not the plenums, and without
    any of the customary fanfare.

    At the moment, Moscow wants the Kosova issue returned to the UN
    Security Council, ostensibly in order to reverse Kosova's independence
    and halt its recognition (Interfax, February 15, 16).

    Such resort to the UNSC also signifies the beginning of a face-saving
    retreat from the previous show of intransigence. Referring this
    issue to the UNSC at this point is tantamount to burying it in that
    veto-bound forum, without openly acknowledging defeat. With this move,
    Moscow plays to Greater Serbian nationalism, but has no hope to change
    the situation on the ground.

    The CIS summit, scheduled for February 21 in Moscow, should further
    restrain Russian rhetoric about Abkhazia and South Ossetia. No CIS
    country ever associated itself with Russian threats to recognize the
    secession of those two Georgian territories. Should Putin revert to
    such threats, he might at best find himself in the company of Belarus
    President Alyaksandr Lukashenka (though even this does not seem very
    likely). Even Armenia would not risk its relations with Georgia by
    endorsing such Russian threats against Armenia's neighbor country and
    lifeline to the world. Azerbaijan and Moldova, which face secessions
    and military occupations of their territories, would condemn any
    Russian "recognition" of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. It would also
    be condemned by Ukraine and Kazakhstan, both of which reckon with
    possible Russian exploitation of ethnic issues on their territories.

    Moscow's two-year old bluff has been called in Kosova. While Russian
    policy remains unpredictable (particularly during the presidential
    transition in the Kremlin), any Russian leverage through the threat
    of recognizing the post-Soviet secessions seems to have run out.

    --Vladimir Socor

    --Boundary_(ID_YNdg/IWVU0jvN5GrBGbnWQ)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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