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Caucasus Not A Chessboard, Russian Bear Not Player Either, Thomas De

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  • Caucasus Not A Chessboard, Russian Bear Not Player Either, Thomas De

    CAUCASUS NOT A CHESSBOARD, RUSSIAN BEAR NOT PLAYER EITHER, THOMAS DE WAAL SAYS

    news.am
    Sept 15 2010
    Armenia

    "Twenty years after the end of the Soviet Union, news from the South
    Caucasus is bleak. The region's two longest borders, which stretch
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan and between Georgia and Russia, remain
    wholly or partially shut. Corrupt bureaucrats make even the nominally
    open borders closed to free trade. Three de facto statelets -Abkhazia,
    South Ossetia and Nagorno-Karabakh- exist in a twilight zone, separate
    from their Soviet-era "parents," Georgia and Azerbaijan, but not quite
    sovereign states either. Hundreds of thousands of refugees remain
    displaced by war. Poverty and unemployment are endemic. Millions
    work away from home as migrant workers, mainly in Russia. Both locals
    and outsiders share the blame for creating this miserable picture,"
    Thomas de Waal, a British journalist, writer and an expert on the
    Caucasus says in his article "Call off the Great Game" published in
    the "Foreign Policy" magazine.

    According to him, the region is a "Great Chessboard" where the world
    powers push the locals around like pawns to serve their own goals.

    "That is not what actually happens. In actual fact, however the
    geopolitical weather changes, the locals always manage to manipulate
    the outside powers at least as much as the other way round. In the
    21st century the Caucasus is still the Caucasus, in all its complexity
    and variety-not an assimilated province of Russia, Turkey, or Iran,"
    Voice of Russia reports referring to the source.

    "Over the course of history, Armenians, Azerbaijanis, and Georgians,
    as well as the region's other smaller ethnic groups, have all
    persistently survived invasion and resisted assimilation. It's true
    the price of survival has come in the form of Faustian pacts with
    other Great Powers, in which the Azerbaijanis allied themselves with
    Turks and British; Georgians with Germans and British; Armenians,
    Abkhaz and Ossetians with Russians," the source reads.

    The author stresses the second mirage is that of the Russian bear
    looming over this region ready to maul the relatively defenseless
    Caucasian peoples, even today. To be sure, Russia is still the most
    powerful outside actor in the region.

    "A third mirage is the perception of the South Caucasus as an area
    of great Western strategic interest-an approach, paradoxically,
    that actually does more harm than good," the source reports.

    "As for Western policy-makers, I believe they should ask themselves
    two questions every time they contemplate an intervention in the
    South Caucasus: "Is my action helping to open borders and free up a
    blocked region?" and "Does it empower ordinary people and not just
    governments?" the author concludes.




    From: A. Papazian
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