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TBILISI: Larsi Checkpoint Reopens: So What?

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  • TBILISI: Larsi Checkpoint Reopens: So What?

    LARSI CHECKPOINT REOPENS: SO WHAT?

    The Messenger
    March 3 2010
    Georgia

    The Larsi checkpoint reopened on March 1, following more than 6 months
    of negotiations between Russia and Georgia under Armenian mediation.

    Nothing is known about the content of these negotiations: what
    was discussed and who asked for what? There has been no convincing
    explanation of why this checkpoint has been opened at all, but the
    one thing we know for sure is that Georgia will gain nothing from
    the reestablishment of a land connection with Russia.

    Georgia maintains that the checkpoint has been opened for the sake of
    Armenia, under some international pressure. The administration assures
    us that opening the checkpoint does not compromise Georgia's security.

    However some analysts challenge this, insisting that under the
    existing circumstances an open border with Russia is extremely
    dangerous for Georgia.

    There are no diplomatic relations between Georgia and Russia. Moscow
    occupies 1/5th of Georgian territory and the Russian President has
    declared Saakashvili persona non grata. Despite all this the only land
    connection between Georgia and Russia, which Moscow closed unilaterally
    in 2006, has been reopened. While the negotiations were being conducted
    some Georgian analysts hoped that Russia would lift its embargo on
    Georgian agricultural products if it was also prepared to open the
    checkpoint, but others stated that territory cannot be exchanged
    for the chance to sell wine and mineral water. The checkpoint is
    open, the Russian embargo is still in force, Russia still occupies
    the breakaway regions. Nor have any special benefits been given to
    the Georgians living near the border. Georgia receives almost zero
    economic profit from the reopened checkpoint. Maybe the lorry drivers
    will stop and eat in a Georgian restaurant, buy goods here or fill
    their tanks with petrol on this side of the border. But that's it.

    We are told that if cargo can pass between Armenia and Russia through
    this checkpoint Armenia will be friendlier to Georgia. A possible
    separatist outbreak among Georgia's ethnic Armenians in Javakheti
    will be avoided, Armenia will refuse to recognise Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia and the Armenian media will stop broadcasting anti Georgian
    material. However Georgian analysts suppose, not without serious
    grounds, that Russia will use the newly opened road to send military
    hardware, logistics supplies and spare parts to the Russian military
    base in Armenia. After the Russian aggression against Georgia in
    August 2008 this base and the rest of Armenia could only be supplied
    by plane. So it could be said that this is a very controversial deal.

    Is it not strange to be helping the enemy supply its bases in a
    neighbouring country? Analysts ask this question and express their
    utmost surprise and concern.

    Some Georgian analysts expect further Russian provocations in the
    Kazbegi region now the checkpoint has been opened, as Russia has
    designs on occupying this region as well if the recent 'historical
    analysis' is to be believed. The Ossetian media has started saying
    that Kazbegi was historically Ossetian territory and should therefore
    belong to the Kokoity regime. A couple of hundred Ossetian families
    do live there, so the more pessimistic analysts think that these
    Ossetians might ask the Russians to help them and Russia will send
    its troops in response. The West, as is traditional, would express its
    concern about this but do no more, and more Georgian territory would
    therefore be lost. This is a very pessimistic scenario, and hopefully
    things will not turn out to be that bad, but it is a possibility.

    It would have been more realistic for Georgia to ask for some
    conditions in return for opening the checkpoint, for example OSCE
    observers being allowed to enter the occupied territories or at least
    be based at the Larsi checkpoint. The administration may try and calm
    the population by saying there is no threat whatsoever in reopening
    Larsi, but most Georgians doubt the ability of the authorities
    to assess long term developments logically and realistically,
    having experienced the August 2008 war and the obvious provocations
    beforehand.
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