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  • Russia's Arguments

    RUSSIA'S ARGUMENTS
    by Dario Valcarcel

    ABC Newspaper
    Sept 11 2008
    Spain

    Let us return to the strange Georgian crisis. We recalled here ("Oil
    and Gas Pipelines," 21 August 2008) the blunders made by Georgian
    President Mikheil Saakashvili. On 7 August, he ordered his troops
    to seize the South Ossetian capital, Tskhinvali, by surprise. Russia
    continues to be the world's second largest nuclear power. This gift
    from Saakashvili to Putin and Medvedev was not easy to understand.

    Since 2000, Russia has been transformed. Within the Russian state,
    there is a vile mob, which ordered the killing of Anna Politkovskaya
    and many others. But it seems that this mob is not making any
    progress. In fact, it is falling back. Russia is the world's largest
    natural gas producer and the third largest oil producer (although it
    does not belong to OPEC). British Petroleum and the new consortium
    of Russian businessmen, namely TNK, which have recently reached an
    agreement, have control over Siberia's large oilfields, which total a
    fifth of BP's total reserves. The agreement was about to collapse. A
    new agreement has just been reached: BP has given up some seats
    on the board, but it will not lose control of this venture. Peter
    Sutherland, BP chairman and a former EU commissioner, was very clear:
    Russia is in need of investment and technology to curb the fall in
    its oil-pumping capacity. BP is benefiting from this crisis. Russia is
    worried about some territories, such as Georgia, which are being used
    as corridors for oil and gas exports to the Turkish Mediterranean (the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline). The Turkish president's visit to Armenia
    on 6 September did not go unnoticed. Neither in the EU nor in Moscow.

    The Russians put some strong arguments on the table during the
    conflict with Georgia. It was President Saakashvili who ordered the
    Georgian troops to capture the South Ossetian capital by surprise,
    breaking the agreements that had authorized Moscow to keep a so-called
    peacekeeping contingent in South Ossetia since 1992. After the Soviet
    Union collapsed, Russia proposed an agreement forbidding both states
    to resort to force in Ossetia and Abkhazia. On 19 August, Eduard
    Shevardnadze, the former Georgian president and the Soviet Union's
    last foreign minister, expressed reservations about Saakashvili and
    added: "It is possible to maintain good relations with Russia. Georgia
    needs them."

    Russia has hastened to draw a parallel between Kosovo and South
    Ossetia. We are once again witnessing the clash between two
    contradictory principles of the international law: the territorial
    integrity of sovereign states and the peoples' right to decide
    their future. Some people defend, not without reason, the wisdom of
    provisional situations. To maintain the status quo without resorting
    to war. Such temporary situations may last centuries. When there
    are no real solutions in sight, is it so reprehensible to buy
    some time? It is not respectable to defend a dream world in which
    high ideals are imposed on interests. Those who defend that empty
    altruism know that they are performing a comedy. Russia is not Holy
    Russia. But, surprisingly, it has made great progress compared with
    the misgovernment and looting of the Yeltsin years. Putin has led
    many Russians to recover their national dignity.

    The outgoing US vice president has just visited Georgia and
    Ukraine. His message was: You will be able to join the Atlantic
    Alliance. But, rather than the interests of Georgia and Ukraine,
    it will be the NATO member countries' interests that will determine
    whether they will join NATO. Only the Baltic republics share borders
    with the Russian Federation. Lithuania, the most powerful of the Baltic
    countries, shares its southwestern border with Kaliningrad. Poland,
    Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, Romania, and Bulgaria have
    no borders with Russia. To declare that NATO is a defensive alliance
    does not help matters. Before starting NATO accession talks with
    Georgia and Ukraine, we should talk to Russia. With his tendency to
    play roles, President Saakashvili News, Most Recent 60 Days stated:
    "If we do not stop Russia, if the world does not stop Russia, its
    tanks will invade any European capital tomorrow." Perhaps he knew
    that he was exaggerating.
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