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Georgian Factor In The US Middle East Policy

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  • Georgian Factor In The US Middle East Policy

    GEORGIAN FACTOR IN THE US MIDDLE EAST POLICY
    Boris Dolgov

    en.fondsk.ru
    22.09.2008

    The US support for the Tbilisi aggression against South Ossetia
    has highlighted the importance of Georgia as the country located
    in the proximity to the Middle East to Washington's plans. Clearly,
    the objectives of the US presence in Georgia are

    - Maintaining the uninterrupted transit of oil for the US consumption
    via the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline;

    - Muscling Russia out of the Caucasus and turning Georgia into a
    foothold for the destabilization of Russia's southern regions,
    especially the Caucasian Republics of Chechnya, Dagestan,
    Kabardino-Balkaria, and Ingushetia1;

    - Gaining control over the Caspian region and Central Asia;

    - Using the territory of Georgia as an intermediate location in an
    attack against Iran.

    The neocons who are currently at the helm in Washington are trying
    to finalize the process of partitioning Russia, which began with
    the demise of the USSR. In this light, any moves made by Moscow to
    ensure its security, particularly in South Ossetia which is located
    at Russia's southern border, are portrayed as "an aggression" and
    cause the response in the form of ferocious informational attacks
    and demonstrations of force like the recent dispatching of the US
    Navy to the Black Sea.

    US Republican presidential candidate J. McCain called for recognizing
    the independence of Chechnya and several other republics of the Russian
    Federation in response to Moscow's recognition of the independence of
    South Ossetia and Abkhazia. In an interview to ABC on September 12,
    Republican nominee for Vice President Sara Palin described Russia's
    conduct in South Ossetia as an aggression against the small democratic
    Georgia and said she did not exclude opting for a military conflict
    with Russia in the future.

    A US senator wrote in a paper published on September 8 that, in accord
    with a secret deal between Georgia, the US, and Israel, two runways
    had been constructed in Georgia to be used by Israeli reconnaissance
    aircrafts to monitor Russia and Iran. The runways would also be used
    by the US and Israeli warplanes in the case of a war with Iran. The
    Russian army destroyed both runways while suppressing the Georgian
    aggression against South Ossetia.

    Both due to its proximity to Iran and from the political standpoint,
    Georgia is a country whose territory could be conveniently used for
    an attack against Iran. The US and Israeli warplanes based in Georgia
    would have to traverse the airspace of either Armenia or Azerbaijan
    to reach Iran, but it appears that the circumstance is not regarded
    as a problem in Pentagon.

    The September, 2008 visit of French President N. Sarkozy to Syria -
    a country located far away from Georgia - is nevertheless directly
    related to the=2 0conflict in South Ossetia. Sarkozy toured Syria a
    few days after its President Bashar al-Assad expressed support for
    Russia's reaction to the Georgian aggression against the formerly
    unrecognized Republic and said Syria was ready to host the Russian
    Iskander missiles in case Moscow decided to deploy them in response
    to the deployment of the US antimissiles in Poland.

    No doubt, the objectives of Sarkozy's visit to Syria and his talks
    with Assad were not limited to an attempt - in the interests of the
    US - to destroy the country's alliance with Iran and to preclude
    its further rapproachment with Russia. Still, as French diplomatic
    sources disclosed, the themes had been invoked. As a reward, Syria
    was promised a normalization of the relations initially with France
    and subsecuently with the West in general.

    At the same time, Sarkozy is involved in the negotiations on a peace
    agreement between Syria and Israel, which are going on between Syria,
    Qatar, Turkey, and France. France is playing the role of the key
    intermediary in the process.

    Sarkozy indicated in an interview to a Syrian radio station after
    his meeting with Assad that an Israeli attack against Iran - a
    development that would be a serious threat from Syria's standpoint -
    was likely. Assuming hypothetically that Russian missiles are deployed
    in Syria, Israel would have to think twice before deciding to attack
    Iran (and possibly also Syria as Ir an's ally). Though, the support
    for the idea of a war with Iran is not all-embracing in Israel. For
    example, Israeli President Shimon Peres said he opposes a military
    strike on Iran and prefers the use of international economic sanctions
    to persuade Tehran to halt its nuclear enrichment programme. He said:
    "If the Americans manage to form a coalition to unify their positions
    with those of Europeans, they have sufficient means to exert pressure
    on the Iranians".

    The new system of international relations which started to
    emerge after the August conflict in Georgia makes a unipolar world
    impossible. Though a new confrontation between the US and Russia is not
    imminent (as both are interested in maintaining serious relations and
    contacts), an economic and political rivalry between the two countries
    is likely to be an enduring phenomenon. Under the circumstances Russia
    should reconsider its current course in foreign politics which, until
    recently, was typically described as pragmatic. The course motivated
    by the hunger for immediate economic benefits may have no future and
    doom Russia to being an outsider in the new international settings.

    If Russia seeks to strengthen its international positions,
    it needs to focus on its persistent domestic problems. Those
    include the overreliance on natural resources in the economy,
    drastic disproportions in the distribution of income levels among the
    population unseen in developed countries (the incomes of the wealthiest
    and the poorest strata of the Russian population are estimated to
    differ by a factor of several dozen), and the widespread corruption.

    It is also of great importance to Russia to identify potential allies
    - which many of the Middle East countries are - and to find ways to
    attract them. Russia needs to act synchronously in both hemispheres
    with the purpose of forming a more predictable and balanced world
    which cannot but be multi-polar.

    1 Experts from the Institute for Oriental Studies of the Russian
    Academy of Science opine that the US intelligence community
    is attempting to destabilize the situation in these Republics,
    particularly in Ingushetia, with the help of Sufi orders whose Sheikhs
    regularly visit the US.
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