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  • Aftermath Of War

    AFTERMATH OF WAR

    The Times
    August 7, 2009
    UK

    Neither Russia nor Georgia won last year's conflict, which has
    paralysed the region

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    A year after the summer war that erupted in the Caucasus while the rest
    of the world was watching the Beijing Olympics, Russia and Georgia are
    on high alert. Each side accuses the other of stoking the tensions,
    deliberate provocations and seeking to relaunch hostilities. Each
    seeks to blame the other for starting the fighting and to justify
    its own actions as self-defence. And each is now seeking, by vigorous
    propaganda, to overcome the lasting damage that the war has left on
    its image and on the trust in its leadership.

    In the uneven contest, Russia initially won a swift victory. Moscow,
    increasingly angered by Georgia's overt hostility to its larger
    neighbour, its pro-American stance, attempts to join Nato and series
    of diplomatic snubs, set an ambush into which Georgia blundered. Daily
    incidents provoked by separatists in South Ossetia goaded President
    Saakashvili into a rash attempt to seize back control of this region
    as well as Abkhazia, which had also thrown off rule by Tbilisi. The
    Russians, however, were waiting. Their troops poured across into South
    Ossetia, pushed back the Georgians and then occupied swaths of Georgian
    territory. The fighting ended with a tense stand-off, mediation by
    France and a subsequent Russian withdrawal to the two enclave s.

    The aftermath was bitter. Nato froze relations with Moscow. The US
    returned to the language and postures of the Cold War. President
    Medvedev's attempt to distance himself from his predecessor and
    warm up relations with the West were stillborn. But Moscow gained
    its aims. Other former Soviet republics chafing at Moscow's attempt
    to circumscribe them were intimidated. South Ossetia and Abkhazia
    were effectively detached from Georgia. All talk of a swift Nato
    entry for Ukraine and Georgia was quietly dropped. Confidence in Mr
    Saakashvili's political judgment was shaken, in Georgia and abroad.

    Georgia also believes that it won a political victory. It forced
    Washington to send warships to its coast in symbolic solidarity. It
    rallied Western opinion against Russian bullying and won the sympathy
    of others in the region. It united a fractious country behind President
    Saakashvili. And it won assurances that the West would respond swiftly
    to any fresh attack from Russia.

    In truth, however, the war has been a disaster for both
    countries. Russia has found it hard to shake off the image of a
    bully and an aggressor. A solution to other "frozen conflicts" --
    disputes such as Nagorno-Karabakh and Transdniestria left over from
    the break-up of the Soviet Union -- now looks farther away than
    ever, bedevilled by mistrust of Moscow. And the vaunted attempt by
    the new US Administration to press=2 0the reset button in relations
    with Russia seems to have done little to warm up the poor relations
    between Russia and its Western neighbours.

    For Georgia, the cost of Mr Saakashvili's hotheaded naivety has been
    high. Political opposition has challenged his leadership and led to
    accusations of human rights violations and electoral fraud. The country
    faces a bill of at least $1 billion in reconstruction. Regaining South
    Ossetia now looks a lost cause, as does Nato membership. The wounds
    are raw, and the region remains volatile. United Nations monitors have
    been forced to withdraw, but peace is nowhere in sight. The world was
    caught unprepared by the conflict. But it was one that both sides lost.
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