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Two Years Since The Five-Day War

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  • Two Years Since The Five-Day War

    TWO YEARS SINCE THE FIVE-DAY WAR
    Andrei ARESHEV

    en.fondsk.ruEurasia
    14.08.2010

    The International Association of Ossetian Communities held rallies in
    several European cities on the eve of the anniversary of Georgia's
    aggression against South Ossetia. In Brussels, Strasbourg, Berlin,
    and Ankara, protesters demanded the recognition of South Ossetia's
    independence, official condemnations of the Georgian policy, and
    the release of Ossetian prisoners. Representatives of the Ossetian
    communities in Europe, the administration of South Ossetia, and
    several European public organizations must be credited with serious
    efforts to convince Europe not to view the situation exclusively
    through the prism of Georgia's arguments. In particular, Ossetian
    activists translated into English and French an array of historical
    documents showing how the Republic of South Ossetia was crushed by the
    Menshevist Georgia in 1920 and published a number of vivid accounts
    of the drama suffered by South Ossetia during the 2008 Georgian attack.

    An international conference titled "Two years Later: Lessons, Realia,
    and the Future. Europeans' perspective on the Five Day War in South
    Ossetia" convened on the eve of the tragic 08.08.08 anniversary. The
    discussions at the forum largely revolved around the reflection of
    the Five Day War in global media and the forecasts for the Caucasian
    region. Representatives of European NGOs gave intriguing talks and
    occasionally expressed views quite critical of Georgia, but the easily
    unveiled truth is that the international politics decision-making
    behind the facade of the "public democracy" is concentrated in the
    hands of a handful of individuals.

    Two years ago Russia faced massive media and diplomatic pressure
    over its response to Georgia's aggression against South Ossetia. The
    pressure is still on and will likely persist, meaning that we are to
    witness a new series of debates and disagreements in the future.

    For the most part, Europe's perception of the August, 2008 war between
    Georgia and South Ossetia remains unchanged. The EU still supports
    Georgia and regards Russia's reaction as at least unwarranted. Due
    to various circumstances, the Georgian theme in Russia's relations
    with the US and the EU has receded from public discourse but its
    reanimation can be expected any moment, for example if the US and/or
    Israel strike Iran and the attack triggers major military provocations
    in the Caucasus. Europe continues denying South Ossetia the recognition
    of its independence and treats it as a province of Georgia. The
    later is a US ally in the Caucasus, and Italian journalist Giulietto
    Chiesa even believes that - as a result of the recent Gaza crisis -
    the Israeli aircrafts based in Turkey can be relocated to Georgia.

    The August, 2008 developments marked a crucial phase of the collapse of
    the already inefficient system of the instruments of international law,
    predictably giving military force an ever greater role in international
    relations. In fact, commonly accepted legal mechanisms of preventing
    conflicts between ethnic groups or countries are hardly worth talking
    about since the passing of the notorious verdict on the Kosovo
    independence by the International Court of Justice. The resolution
    of ethnic conflicts has irreversibly drifted from the sphere of law
    to the sphere of current politics, and the arrangement exposes the
    international security architecture to fundamental risks.

    >>From the outset, there was no hope that the Russian diplomacy would -
    on the UN level, for example - convince the international community
    to condemn Saakashvili's aggression or to impose an embargo on
    weaponry supplies to his regime. Russia's objections notwithstanding,
    Europe is eager to integrate Georgia - as well as Ukraine - into
    NATO. The Russian diplomacy's failure to make the world realize that
    Saakashvili's regime was responsible for unleashing the war in South
    Ossetia1 did not come as a surprise - no doubt, double standards will
    dominate the global politics in the foreseeable future. This is the
    reason why the Russian administration chose to de jure cement the
    new status quo in the Caucasian region, regardless of how the step
    angered Western (British and other) thinktanks. The anger surfaced
    at the forum in Strasbourg...

    Evidently, Tbilisi is seeking to maximally drag the US and the EU into
    the Caucasian affairs. Notably, the EU with its initiatives like the
    Eastern Partnership and association agreements is a background player
    in the Caucasian region compared to the US and Russia.

    The immediate parties to the conflict - Georgia on one side and South
    Ossetia plus Abkhazia on the other - are equally committed to the view
    that a fair resolution can only be brokered with the help of external
    forces. Georgia is inviting the US and the EU while Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia are summoning Russia. The Geneva consultations produced no
    breakthrough, nor will they as long as their agenda is focused on
    formulating a legally binding agreement on avoiding the use of force.

    Georgia rejects the deal out of hand claiming that it can only sign
    an agreement of the kind directly with Russia. Geopolitical reckoning
    and vague expectations that the strategic balance in the region will
    tilt prevail over the intentions to build a common European security
    architecture.

    The current - and, alas, temporary - dip in the intensity of
    anti-Russian rhetoric may well be a prologue to a new round of pressure
    on Moscow. Things can get worse if the US adopts a hawkish stance
    (for example, due to the advent of a new US Administration or the
    triumph of Republicans in the coming Congress elections). Then we are
    sure to encounter a full-scale revival of all of the recent critical
    stereotypes. A "gentle" version of essentially the same evolution
    will likely materialize in the form of the reset which has already
    drawn Moscow closer to Washington on Iran and several other issues.

    >>From the perspective of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Russia as the
    country interested in maintaining its influence over the region in
    the long term should extend to them guarantees of their security,
    which they bought dearly and cast irreversibly in the legal form of an
    independent statehood. Abkhazia and South Ossetia hope that, led by
    its own geopolitical interests, Russia will create an alliance with
    them and will never revert to its defeatist 1990ies policies2. The
    projection is that Russia's strategic stance in dealing with Georgia
    will be consequent and will not be affected by minute plans to reach
    a deal with Georgia at the cost of sacrificing the gains of the Five
    Day War.

    The struggle between Russia and the West over the Caucasus will
    continue despite the pledged reset. The visits of US Vice President J.

    Biden to Tbilisi and of US Secretary of State H. Clinton - to Baku,
    Yerevan, and Tbilisi (a year later), along with a whole range of
    other developments, showed clearly that the intensity of the rivalry
    between Washington, Brussels, and Moscow over the Caucasian region is
    not going to subside. The US has no intention to leave South Caucasus
    to Russia, and the EU will not become the champion in the region in
    the nearest future due to the following reasons:

    1) The EU mediation lacks a unified underlying policy.

    2) The EU is overly burdened with its own problems.

    3) The EU would not risk tilting the balance in the Caucasus at the
    cost of antagonizing Moscow over relatively minor issues.

    4) The EU will likely opt for an auxiliary role in implementing a
    new US strategy aimed at maximally pushing the Caucasian republics -
    especially Abkhazia - off Russia's orbit.

    5) There is no clarity concerning the future Eurointegration of
    Georgia and other Caucasian republics3

    At the same time, South Ossetia and Abkhazia hope to eventually
    establish normal relations with the EU and to start moving towards
    Eurointegration, though the latter task ranks lower on their lists of
    priorities than cultivating the relations with Russia as the guarantor
    of their security. Brussel's position will render meaningless any
    talk about the region's European future as a means of addressing
    its conflicts given that the EU believes that Georgia should retain
    its Soviet-era borders. In the mid-term, the situation around South
    Ossetia is bound to be a zero-sum game in which gains on one side
    are tantamount to losses on the other.

    The interpretations of the events that took place in Abkhazia two years
    ago and the visions of Georgia's relations with its former autonomous
    parts will at various levels remain a sphere of ideological strife. A
    lot depends on the clarity and coherence of the positions of Moscow,
    South Ossetia, and also of the Ossetian communities which are growing
    increasingly visible in Europe and other parts of the world.

    In this context, the rallies which convened early this August instill
    a measure of optimism.

    _________________________ (1) A. Kurtov. South Caucasus: Expectations
    and Reality // Russia-Armenia: Opportunities to Deepen the Strategic
    Partnership.

    Moscow, RISI, 2010, p. 56

    (2) Tbilisi was the first to resort to military force in dealing with
    its defiant autonomies, but at the initial phase of the conflict the
    Soviet - and later the post-Soviet - Georgian leadership met with no
    response whatsoever from Moscow

    (3) E. Ponomareva. Abkazia and South Ossetia: the
    Future of Their Relations with Georgia. Part III //
    http://www.fondsk.ru/article.php?id=2638




    From: A. Papazian
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