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BAKU: The West Should Unite in Support of Georgia

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  • BAKU: The West Should Unite in Support of Georgia

    Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
    May 7 2008


    The West Should Unite in Support of Georgia
    07.05.08 17:30

    Azerbaijan, Baku, 7 May / Trend News/ Ariel Cohen, L.L.B, Ph.D., a
    Senior Research Fellow at The Heritage Foundation (specially for Trend
    News)

    Russian actions in Abkhazia have ignited a red light in many European
    capitals, as well as Washington, NATO, and EU headquarters. The
    question that faces Europe and the U.S. is how to stop Russia's
    violation of Georgia's sovereignty and territorial integrity. For
    that, Washington needs to secure Western unity in firm opposition to
    Russia's policies and actions.

    Western allies should recognize that Russia's bullying behavior
    against its neighbors is against Moscow's long-term security
    interests. A cooperative and rule-abiding Russia already is in part,
    and may increasingly evolve more completely into, a security and
    business partner for Europe and the United States, as well as its
    neighbors.

    On the other hand, a Russia that reverts to the old imperialist modes
    of operation is nothing but trouble and a source for security concerns
    near and far.

    America's European partners, including Germany and France, should take
    Russia's expansionist rhetoric and deeds seriously and oppose them
    vigorously. The West should not allow Russia's violation of Georgia's
    territorial integrity to drive a wedge between the U.S. and its
    European allies. The U.S. and its European allies should express full
    diplomatic support to Georgia with regard to its territorial integrity
    and sovereignty.

    The West should heed Georgia's call to convene emergency meetings at
    the U.N. Security Council and the Organization for Security and
    Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) to discuss Russia's April 16 decision to
    expand its ties with Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The West should
    persuade Russia to pull out its soldiers from the peacekeeping
    contingents in Abkhazia and South Ossetia and replace them with
    U.N. or OSCE-approved peacekeeping forces that could include troops
    from, for example, Ukraine, Romania, and Poland as its lead
    contingents.

    In the last few days, Moscow has beefed up its `peacekeeping force' in
    the breakaway Abkhazia on the Black Sea, claiming it is protecting
    Russian citizens, who are the majority population of Abkhazia, Russian
    troops are amassing on the de-facto Abkhazia-Georgia border. The
    Caucasus may be on the brink of a war. In the meantime, Russia has
    accused Georgia of planning to invade Abkhazia. These accusations
    sound hollow.

    Throughout April, Russia has escalated its political and military
    pressure on its neighbor Georgia. At the NATO summit in Bucharest,
    President Vladimir Putin reportedly threatened to recognize the
    independence of the breakaway autonomous republics of Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia if Georgia was granted a Membership Action Plan (MAP)
    for eventual accession to NATO. On April 16, despite France and
    Germany balking at providing a MAP, and apparently as retribution for
    the West's recognition of Kosovo's independence, Putin instructed the
    Russian Foreign Ministry to upgrade the legal and economic ties
    between Russia and the secessionist governments of Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia, violating Georgian sovereignty.

    More recently, on April 20, according to Georgian reports, a Russian
    MiG-29 fighter shot down an unmanned Georgian aerial reconnaissance
    vehicle in violation of Georgian airspace. Despite some Russian
    concessions in its bilateral relations with Tbilisi, Russian hostility
    toward Georgia does not seem to be abating.

    Unity Against Threat. The question that faces Europe and the U.S. is
    how to stop Russia's violation of Georgia's sovereignty and
    territorial integrity. For that, Washington needs to secure Western
    unity in firm opposition to Russia's irresponsible policies and
    actions.

    Western allies should recognize that Russia's bullying behavior
    against its neighbors is against Moscow's long-term security
    interests. A cooperative and rule-abiding Russia already is in part,
    and may increasingly evolve more completely into, a security and
    business partner for Europe and the United States. On the other hand,
    a Russia that reverts to the old imperialist modes of operation is
    nothing but trouble and a source for security concerns near and far.

    America's European partners, including Germany and France, should take
    Russia's expansionist rhetoric and deeds seriously and oppose them
    vigorously. The West should not allow Russia's violation of Georgia's
    territorial integrity to drive a wedge between the U.S. and its
    European allies. The U.S. and its European allies should express full
    diplomatic support to Georgia with regard to its territorial integrity
    and sovereignty.

    The West should heed Georgia's call to convene emergency meetings at
    the U.N. Security Council and the Organization for Security and
    Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) to discuss Russia's April 16 decision to
    expand its ties with Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The West should
    persuade Russia to pull out its soldiers from the peacekeeping
    contingents in Abkhazia and South Ossetia and replace them with
    U.N. or OSCE-approved peacekeeping forces that could include troops
    from, for example, Ukraine, Romania, and Poland as its lead
    contingents.

    About two weeks after the Bucharest meeting, President Putin
    instructed his Foreign Ministry to prepare measures to `create
    mechanisms of comprehensive defense of the rights, freedoms and lawful
    interests of the Russian citizens living in Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia.' The majority of the Abkhaz and South Ossetians hold Russian
    passports and participated in the Russian parliamentary and
    presidential elections.

    According to the Russian Foreign Ministry, Putin also ordered the
    Russian government to work together with the breakaway governments to
    `organize cooperation in the trade, economic, social and
    techno-scientific fields and in the spheres of information, culture
    and education, particularly with the enlistment of Russia's regions.'

    Putin also ordered the Russian government to recognize the legality of
    corporate entities registered in these often-lawless regions, and `to
    cooperate with Abkhazia and South Ossetia in the framework of legal
    assistance in civil, family and criminal matters.' Russian Foreign
    Ministry consular offices would provide consular services for the
    enclaves' residents.

    There are at least two reasons for Russia's heavy-handed policies
    toward Georgia. First, Russian diplomats and analysts have repeatedly
    declared since at least 2007 that Kosovo's declaration of independence
    and recognition by the U.S. and the major Western powers would lead to
    recognition of pro-Russian secessionist regimes, including
    Transnistria in Moldova, Abkhazia, and South Ossetia. The second
    reason is Russia's adamant opposition to the U.S.-supported bid by
    Georgia to become a NATO member.

    A week before the Bucharest summit, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey
    Lavrov declared that `it would be a very dangerous game if they
    [Georgia] secure NATO support and solve conflicts in Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia by force¦. Abkhazia and South Ossetia can't even
    think about Georgia joining NATO. It's impermissible to play with
    fire.' During the NATO summit in Bucharest, President Putin warned
    President Bush that if Georgia were offered a MAP, Moscow would
    establish a buffer zone between Russia and NATO. Putin added that
    NATO's eastward expansion would be a threat to the interests of
    Russia, which would be forced to undertake `appropriate
    counter-measures.'

    Georgia was a colonial dependency of the Russian Empire, and later the
    Soviet Union, since the late 18th century. Even after the USSR
    collapsed, Moscow continued to bully Tbilisi. In 1992`1993, after
    Georgia attempted to prevent secession of Abkhazia by force, Russia
    armed and supported the Abkhaz separatists and deployed Chechen
    `volunteers' to fight alongside them. The result was the de-facto
    secession of Abkhazia and the ethnic cleansing of over 300,000
    Georgians from their homes. The notorious late Islamist warlord Shamil
    Basaev, later the military leader of the Chechen rebels, fought in
    Abkhazia in the early 1990s as a Russian mercenary. Abkhazia has
    turned into a cigarette-smuggling criminal gang heaven.

    In March 2006, the Kremlin slapped economic sanctions on Tbilisi,
    including restrictions on the importation of Georgian wine, mineral
    water, fruits, and vegetables. Georgia used to export 90 percent of
    its wine to Russia. In September 2006, after Georgia briefly arrested
    four Russian military intelligence officers, the Russian government
    imposed a ban on entry visas for Georgians, affecting hundreds of
    thousands who work in Russia and support their families back
    home. Russia severed all air, rail, and postal communications with
    Georgia as part of its punishment. In December 2006, the Russian
    energy giant Gazprom more than doubled the price of natural gas,
    previously sold to Georgia at a deep discount. And in August 2007, two
    Russian Su-24 ground attack jets launched a 1,000 kg precision-guided
    missile near a village 50 miles north of Tbilisi.

    This month, however, Putin ordered the lifting of visa restrictions,
    initiated bilateral talks to discuss the resumption of Georgian
    exports to Russia, and reopened a border crossing between the two
    countries. He also ordered commercial passenger flights and postal
    links reestablished. The relaxation of the visa restrictions and
    lifting of the trade ban appear designed to soften the impact of
    Moscow's expansion of ties with Abkhazia and South Ossetia.



    Washington should not allow Russian opposition to a NATO MAP for
    Georgia to become an issue between the U.S. and its European
    allies. Instead, NATO countries should show unity in the face of a
    Russian assault on Georgia's territorial integrity. In response to
    Moscow's heavy-handed policies against Georgia, the U.S. and its
    European allies should denounce Russian occupation of Abkhazia. US and
    the European countries should coordinate a diplomatic response, taking
    Russia's expansionist rhetoric and performance seriously and launch
    vigorous protests against them.


    The West should heed Georgia's call to convene emergency meetings at
    the U.N. Security Council and the OSCE to discuss Russia's decision to
    expand its ties with Abkhazia and South Ossetia and express full
    support of Georgia's territorial integrity and sovereignty,

    Washington and the European capitals should support Georgia's demand
    that Russia pull out its Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)
    `peacekeeping' contingents from the two breakaway regions and replace
    them with a U.N. and/or OSCE-approved peacekeeping force that could
    include Ukrainian, Romanian, and Polish peacekeepers.

    Russia's behavior toward Georgia should serve as a warning to its
    neighbors, Europe and the U.S. Georgia may be a new canary in the
    geopolitical mine of Eastern Europe and Eurasia. But Moscow may in the
    future support the Armenian actions to incorporate Nagorno-Karabakh
    into the Armenian state. Thus, it is also a threat to Azerbaijan.

    The Kremlin is testing Western resolve to stand up to its ambitions
    and to its allies' appetites in the post-Soviet space. Failure to stop
    Russian interventionism in Georgia ` or the Armenian agenda in
    Karabakh -- could mean opening the floodgates of border revisions and
    destabilization, masquerading as `defense of co-ehtnic citizens' in
    the CIS.

    This may be a prescription for escalating conflicts in Europe'
    neighborhood to the east. Europe, eventually, would not be able to
    ignore them. In turn, the U.S. and Europe could offer Russia
    incentives if it abandons its attempts to absorb Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia into the Russian Federation or to recognize their
    independence.
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