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Eurasia Daily Monitor - Russia Discards Its "Peacekeeping" Operation

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  • Eurasia Daily Monitor - Russia Discards Its "Peacekeeping" Operation

    RUSSIA DISCARDS ITS "PEACEKEEPING" OPERATION IN ABKHAZIA
    By Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor
    Tuesday, October 14, 2008
    DC

    Russian troops withdrawing to Abkhazia after the August 2008 conflict
    with Georgia (AP) At the CIS summit in Bishkek on October 9 and 10,
    Russia announced the termination of the "CIS collective peacekeeping
    operation in the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict zone." Moscow describes
    its move as a common decision of the assembled heads of state and
    government, in a final attempt to portray the now-defunct operation
    as having been approved multi-nationally from its inception to its end
    (Interfax, Itar-Tass, October 9, 10).

    Despite its CIS cover, the "collective peacekeeping" in Abkhazia
    was always purely Russian. After 2002 CIS meetings abandoned even
    the pretense of discussing this operation, let alone prolonging
    its "mandate." The CIS in any case is not authorized to mandate
    peacekeeping operations, and Georgia has in any case quit the CIS
    following the Russian invasion of the country's interior.

    Moscow's move ends a 14-year-old "peacekeeping" pretense that
    culminated in Russia's full-scale military seizure of Abkhazia
    from Georgia, rendering any peacekeeping redundant from Moscow's
    viewpoint. Russian "peacekeepers," who acted ostensibly under a "CIS
    mandate" and with Georgian consent extracted under duress since 1994,
    are now to be replaced by far larger Russian forces, by "agreement"
    with the Abkhaz authorities, whom Moscow installed in the first place
    and has now given "diplomatic recognition."

    Admittedly, Russia never received a "special responsibility for
    peacekeeping in the CIS," a role that Moscow sought in vain during the
    1990s in international organizations. It did, however, exercise that
    role in practice, as the first stage in a long-term empire-restoration
    strategy. Whether recognized officially or conceded de facto, a
    peacekeeping monopoly is one key ingredient of sphere-of-influence
    building.

    International organizations and Western governments accepted Russia's
    claim to be a neutral mediator between Georgia and the Abkhaz, even as
    Russia acted from the outset as a participant in the conflict against
    Georgia on Georgia's own territory. That international pretense
    continued despite Russia's military operations, economic embargos,
    and political warfare against Georgia.

    The United Nations Security Council, nevertheless, routinely applauded
    the Russian "peacekeeping" in Abkhazia. While never authorizing that
    operation, the UNSC paid it compliments each time when prolonging
    the mandate of UNOMIG (UN Observer Mission in Georgia) at six-month
    intervals. Moscow demanded and received this genuflection regularly
    as a condition for not vetoing UNOMIG. The U.S. State Department and
    other Western chancelleries went along with this semiannual travesty.

    The Russian operation, however, breached the UN's fundamental rules
    of peacekeeping operations. Such operations require consent by the
    sovereign state on the territory on which they are deployed. The
    consent must involve not only acceptance of the operation as such
    but also the parameters of its implementation. Neighboring countries
    and countries with a direct interest or stake in the given conflict
    may not be troop contributors to the peacekeeping operation. Such
    operations are by definition international, not a monopoly of any
    one country. Peacekeeping operations abide by the principles of
    inviolability of borders and non-interference in internal affairs of
    the country in which they are deployed.

    In an unprecedented breach of peacekeeping norms, the Russian military
    backed the ethnic cleansing of Georgians from Abkhazia in 1994 and
    has refused to this day to assist in their safe return. Russian
    "peacekeepers" helped arm the Abkhaz forces and maintain arms
    stockpiles shared with their Abkhaz proxies.

    On the whole, the Euro-Atlantic community never displayed a sense of
    urgency on this issue. It approached it in a spirit of benign neglect
    when Russia was weak and later in a spirit of dependency on Russian
    "help" to resolve various Western dilemmas, even before Russia grew
    stronger. The year 2002 came close to a turning point toward Western
    hands-on involvement. The U.S.-Russia and NATO-Russia summits, held
    near Rome in May of that year, adopted decisions, as expressed in
    the respective communiqués for joint U.S.-Russia and NATO-Russia
    peacekeeping and conflict-resolution efforts on Abkhazia, South
    Ossetia, Transnistria, and Karabakh (with Russia listed in second
    place throughout). This Western initiative dissipated within months,
    however, as the United States and NATO became distracted by Iraq
    and Afghanistan.

    The United States and West European governments have
    practically conceded a "peacekeeping" monopoly to Moscow in
    the "CIS space"--Transnistria, South Ossetia, Abkhazia, and
    Tajikistan--from 1992 until now. Only the government of Azerbaijan
    under then-president Heydar Aliyev had the foresight to turn down the
    offer of "third-country" peacekeeping by Russia through the OSCE in
    the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict.

    It is a tribute to Russian strategy and Western disorientation that
    Moscow began, conducted, and ended this "peacekeeping" operation on its
    own terms during all these years, without serious challenge. Georgian
    and other appeals to internationalize the peacekeeping format fell
    mostly on deaf, indifferent, or distracted ears in the West during
    all this time. Down to the Russian invasion in August of this year,
    Western governments continually advised Georgia to show patience
    and tone down or postpone demands for replacing this purely Russian
    operation. Now, however, Russia itself has ended its operation in
    its own way and timing and on its own terms, which are worse than
    ever from the West's and Georgia's perspective.

    Moscow now takes the position, as Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei
    Lavrov announced, that Russian troops in Abkhazia will "no longer be
    peacekeepers. They will from now on be armed forces," to be stationed
    there under a basing agreement with the Russian-recognized Abkhaz
    authorities (Interfax, Itar-Tass, October 9, 10). Those forces are
    slated to include a brigade-size ground force, to be supplemented by
    air and naval elements, at reactivated Soviet-era bases.

    --Boundary_(ID_G+OAp04WDBIEAhm2xRojAQ)--
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