The conflict is defrozen

Haykakan Zhamanak , Armenia
Aug 12 2008

The conflict is defrozen

The dramatic developments in neighbouring Georgia in recent days and
the hostilities which claimed thousands of human lives are bound to
cause serious concern and analysis in other countries of the South
Caucasus.

In fact, we witnessed how one of the frozen conflicts in the region
exploded in a few hours and this will affect settlement of other
conflicts. As the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict was almost equated to the
South Ossetian, Abkhaz and Dniester conflicts from the point of view
of international perception and presentation during the last years,
the events that took place in South Ossetia are crucial for Nagornyy
Karabakh and Armenia in this regard. Analysts believe that the
practice of military settlement of the regional conflicts after a
ceasefire that lasted for years is causing concern.

Comments by Azerbaijani, Armenian analysts

Meanwhile, there are opinions that irrespective of the outcome of the
events in Georgia, they have already created a precedent, successful
or not, and can influence to some extent the further policies of the
states involved in the regional conflicts. We have already reported
that that during the first hours of the hostilities a certain
inspiration and activity could be seen in Azerbaijan, statements were
made from there that Azerbaijan should also follow Georgia’s example
– to restore its territorial integrity. Yesterday [11 August]
Azerbaijani political analysts and experts discussed this topic
again. In particular, an Azerbaijani political analyst Ilgar
Mammadov, called upon the Azerbaijani government to provide support
to Georgia, as "Georgia’s success is important for Azerbaijan". He
said that "Azerbaijan should provide full support to Georgia, and
military support, if necessary. Only in that case we will manage to
oust Russia from the South Caucasus. Azerbaijan can have an advantage
in the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict and carry out hostilities – to
settle the conflict only after it ousts the Russian Federation."

An Azerbaijani military expert, Yasar Cafarli, said that Azerbaijan’s
economic strengthening irritates Russia, and while choosing its
actions, Azerbaijan should take into account that Russia can at any
moment attack Azerbaijan as well. "The Kremlin understands that if it
yields South Ossetia to Georgia, then a number of defeats will follow
this, separatists will be destroyed in Abkhazia, in Nagornyy Karabakh
and Dniester," Azerbaijani expert Akbar Hasanov wrote yesterday [11
August].

The reaction to what goes on is, naturally, much more reserved in
Armenia. A political expert, Aghasi Yenokyan, believes that it cannot
be ruled out that as a result of the events in Georgia we will see
some change in Azerbaijan’s policy; what is important is that the war
has brought about a few tendencies. The first one is the tendency of
military settlement of territorial disputes, the second one – creating
an updated and changed notion of sovereignty of the states in the
region. "Russia did not take into account any sovereignty, and we mean
not just that of South Ossetia, but the hostilities carried out beyond
its territory [in Georgia proper]," Yenokyan says, adding that
Azerbaijan might act like Georgia.

Official reaction

However, although opinions of political scientists and experts are
very important in such cases as they create a general understanding of
the sentiments in a specific country, official statements made by
governments are much more important. The Armenian and Azerbaijani
foreign ministries made corresponding statements on Friday [8
August]. Azerbaijan backed Georgia’s territorial integrity and
announced that the South Ossetian issue should be settled based on the
principle of territorial integrity. The Azerbaijani government also
announced that they back the actions of the Georgian government in
South Ossetia and find those lawful and in compliance with
international law norms. The Armenian Foreign Ministry expressed
concern over what happened in Georgia and voiced hope that the issue
will be settled in a peaceful way.

[Passage omitted: The statement of the breakaway Nagornyy Karabakh
republic which calls to stop bloodshed and says that military
settlements of such issues has no future]

The head of the Nagornyy Karabakh’s parliamentary committee for
foreign relations, Vahram Atanesyan, said yesterday [11 August] at a
news conference that Georgia’s attempt to return South Ossetia has
failed. Atanesyan described Georgia’s steps as an adventure, and
Russia’s reaction as an equivalent. Atanesyan did not rule out that
the NKR government can provide humanitarian assistance to South
Ossetia, and also stressed that that the events showed that attempts
of military settlement of conflicts are doomed [to fail].

The most important one is the statement made yesterday [11 August ] by
the spokesman for the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry [Xazar Ibrahim]
about continuing the negotiations on settling the Nagornyy Karabakh
conflict in the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group. Accordingly,
Azerbaijan is not going to review the issue of Russia’s chairmanship
in the OSCE Minsk Group due to the position of the Russian government
in the Georgian-Ossetian conflict. However, what complicates the
situation is that the positions of countries can change at any time.

ANKARA: Turkish, Russian ministers to discuss Caucasus cooperation

Anatolia news agency, Turkey
Aug 14 2008

Turkish, Russian ministers to discuss Caucasus cooperation platform

Bodrum, 14 August: Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on
Thursday [14 August] that Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan and
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov would meet and start "Caucasus
Stability and Cooperation Platform" process next week.

Erdogan held a press conference in Bodrum resort town of the western
province of Mugla after his visits to Russia and Georgia.

Erdogan said that he held meetings with Georgian president and UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

Erdogan said that after the clash started in Caucasus, Turkish Red
Crescent was the first organization that reached the region and helped
people.

Erdogan said that he conveyed to the parties the efforts for a
"Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform", which would include
Russia and Georgia.

He said that the platform attached importance to regional peace and
security, and included economic cooperation and energy safety.

Erdogan said that Turkish and Russian foreign ministers would meet
next week and start the process. He added that Turkey also wanted
Azerbaijan to participate in this platform.

Erdogan said that he believed participation of Armenia in this
platform would also contribute seriously to regional peace.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said [on] Thursday that
Turkey favoured Georgia’s territorial integrity.

"Turkey favours Georgia’s independence, sovereignty and its
territorial integrity as defined by international law and resolutions
of the UN Security Council," Erdogan told reporters after his visits
to Russia and Georgia.

Erdogan and Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan met Russian President
Dmitriy Medvedev, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov. Erdogan also met Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili
and Prime Minister Lado Gurgenidze.

The Turkish premier described his contacts "very fruitful".

Opposition papers not to be published due to lack of newsprint

Haykakan Zhamanak, Armenia
Aug 15 2008

Armenian opposition papers not to be published due to lack of
newsprint

Two Armenian opposition dailies, Haykakan Zhamanak and Chorrord
Ishkhanutyun, will not be published on 16 August and 19 August,
because of the lack of newsprint, Haykakan Zhamanak reported on 15
August.

The publishing house has problems with the delivery of newsprint, the
paper said. It added that it planned to save the available stock of
newsprint until the problem was settled. Haykakan Zhamanak said that
it would resume publishing on 20 August.

Chorrord Ishkhanutyun said on 15 August that there were some
difficulties with the import of newsprint due to the recent
developments in Georgia.

Sanctions pressure are criminal means to realize hegemonic ambition

Nodong Sinmun, Pyongyang – North Korea
Aug 13 2008

Sanctions and pressure are criminal means to realize hegemonic
ambition

by reporter Jo Thaek-bom

Today, the imperialists’ manoeuvres of sanctions and pressure against
the anti-imperialist, pro-independent countries are getting more
blatant than any other time. It is the imperialists’ stock-in-trade
method to realize regime change by internationally isolating and
blocking the countries that do not please them with sanctions and
pressure and by rendering [them] helpless. As if it were not enough to
find fault with the anti-imperialist, pro-independent countries for
not being docile with them, spouting "human rights" this and
"democracy" that, [they] are exerting sanctions and pressure branding
[them] as "narcotics criminals," "disseminators of weapons of mass
destruction," and "human trafficking criminals." By doing this, [they]
intend to realize the ambition to dominate the world with the method
of internationally isolating these countries and establishing "useful
governments" for them. In a word, the imperialists’ commotion of
sanctions and pressure is the tyrannical infringement of the sovereign
states’ sovereignty and simultaneously a product of dark design to
realize the ambition to dominate the world.

In the international stage, the imperialists are strengthening the
commotion of sanctions and pressure in the vein of interfering in
international affairs against sovereign states.

In May [ 2008], the United States decided to impose new sanctions on
Burma. Accordingly, all the overseas assets and interests that are
directly or indirectly possessed or managed by the Burmese Government
and its members have been frozen and the US "existing authority" that
permits imposing sanctions on the people who support the Burmese
Government and assist with funds have been expanded. Earlier, in
February [ 2008], the United States took sanction measures against
Burma. At the time, the United States did not hide the fact that such
sanction measures had their purpose in curtailing economic activities
in Burma and isolating the Burmese Government. Saying that the
sanctioned subjects "are providing funds" to the Burmese Government,
the United States froze all their assets and banned the US citizens
from being engaged in any type of transactions with them. Citing
Burma’s "human rights" and "democracy" situation, the United States
criticizes that the Burmese Government "ignores the international
community’s appeal" to carry out dialogue with opposing factions or
ethnic minorities.

The United States is also persistently carrying out sanctions against
Syria.

In February [ 2008], the US Treasury Department announced that a
Syrian businessman had participated in an attempt of harming the Iraqi
and Lebanon Governments and issued sanction measures against him. Due
to this, his assets in the United States were frozen and all the US
companies were banned to deal with him. The United States’ such
measure started from the attempt to link the Syrian Government with
"terrorism."

As is known, in the past, the United States criticized on several
occasions that Syria "permits terrorists to enter Iraq" by way of its
territory. Based on this, the United States took sanction measures in
May 2004, and extended the period in April 2006. In February this
year, [the United States] expanded and re-extended the period of
sanction measures against some Syrian Government members. In May [
2008], [the United States] again decided to extend sanction measures
against Syria by one year, and accordingly, the Syrian people’s assets
were frozen and some products’ exports or re-exports to Syria were
banned.

In addition, the United States continues to take sanction measures
against Belarus, Iran, and Zimbabwe, interfering in these countries’
internal affairs. The case in point is that in March [ 2008], the
United States decided to impose sanctions on the UK and Armenian
companies that exported airplanes to Iran. It goes without saying that
the United States’ such measures provoke strong protests and
discontent from the pertinent countries.

The imperialists’ commotion of sanctions and pressure that becomes
more blatant by the day receives the international community’s
criticism and rejection for being acts of infringing on other
countries’ sovereignty and intervening in internal affairs.

On 2 July, Belarusian President Lukashenko said that trying to
threaten and suppress his country with any sanction would have no
effect, and that although Belarus had opposed illegal immigration,
human trafficking, and illegal drug circulations, what came from the
West were only blatant political, economic pressures. He mentioned
that the status of Belarus was being strengthened in the international
community and particularly the development of relations with Russia
was being stepped up, and expressed the intention of further
developing them. Currently, the Belarusian Government regards the US
sanction measures against its country’s crude oil chemical
corporations as a "war" against the general citizens of Belarus.

A while ago, in connection with the United States’ expansion of the
range of economic sanctions against Belarus, the spokesman of the
Chinese Foreign Ministry said that China consistently opposes [the
United States’] intervention in other countries’ internal affairs and
exertion of pressure with the excuse of "democracy" and "human rights"
and [the United States’] frequent threat of imposing sanctions. He
said that China views that infringing on other countries’ interests
with the use of economic means impedes protecting relations between
states and developing international trade, and stated that in the
recent several years, under President Lukashenko, Belarus had seen
stabilization of society, continuous economic development, and rising
people’s living standards.

The United States’ manoeuvres to isolate and crush Iran also provoke
the international community’s rejection.

The West, including the United States, has systematically expanded
sanctions against Iran by finding fault with Iran’s nuclear issue and
mobilizing the United Nations, but Iran has not surrendered to it but
confidently fought against it as it asserted its right to peaceful
nuclear activities, and the international community also supports
Iran’s position.

Amid the ever-growing international perception that sanctions and
pressure do not constitute a method of resolving issues, recently the
Thai foreign minister has said that his country does not agree with
the US stance to resolve the Burma issue through sanctions. He
asserted that Thailand does not agree with sanctions, saying that to
resolve the Burma issue, there are better ways, such as the talks and
an ASEAN [Association of Southeast Asian Nations] intervention, than
the sanction measures that the United States intends to take.

In June [ 2008], the European Union decided to officially lift
diplomatic sanctions against Cuba. This decision was adopted in the EU
leaders’ meeting held in Brussels on 20 June. Cuba described the EU
measure of lifting sanctions as a victory of "truth and reason."

Regarding the recent presidential election results in Zimbabwe, the
United States blustered that it would reinforce sanctions against the
Zimbabwe Government and its supporting countries, but the African
Union, China, Russia, and many African countries argued for the
resolution of the Zimbabwe issue with dialogue and negotiations,
opposing the attempt of sanctions by the West, including the United
States. In the recent G-8 summit, this was intensively expressed. The
West, including the United States, demanded that the international
community support taking strong sanction measures against
Zimbabwe. Nevertheless, seven African countries’ leaders who attended
the meeting expressed opposing opinions. The July UN Security Council
meeting threw out a proposal of sanction resolution whose content
includes a measure of banning weapons export to Zimbabwe and a measure
of limiting banking and travelling for the country’s government
members, including the president.

This series of facts clearly shows that sanctions and pressure are
never a method of solving problems. It is natural that the
imperialists’ acts of sanctions and pressure are the international
community’s target of criticism.

[translated]

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Bosnian Foreign Ministry: Russia’s arms supply claim

Vecernji list (Bosnia-Hercegovina edition), Croatia
Aug 13 2008

Bosnian Foreign Ministry: Russia’s arms supply claim "a very serious
accusation"

Report by Zdenko Jurilj: "Russia Is Making Accusations; Disputable
Participation of B-H in Supporting, Arming Georgia"

The Russian Defence Ministry is accusing Bosnia-Hercegovina [B-H], as
it says in its protest, of helping the Georgian political regime, in
the runup to the war in South Ossetia, by providing weaponry and
military equipment.

The B-H institutions are not familiar with the contents of the letter
of criticism sent by the Russian administration on 7 August, in which
Bosnia-Hercegovina is accused of exporting arms to Georgia. The B-H
Presidency does not have any official reaction, either, to the
criticism by the Russian Defence Ministry, in which
Bosnia-Hercegovina, as well as a few other countries, is criticized
for exporting weaponry to the country that is marked on the United
Nations map as one with a potential war conflict.

Delivery of Weapons

We asked Deputy Defence Minister Marija Pendes if and what amount of
weapons from the specialized military industry in Bosnia-Hercegovina
was exported to Georgia.

She told us that she had been on leave this week and, therefore, was
not familiar with the Russian note, nor with the information whether
the weapons from Bosnia-Hercegovina ever reached Georgia.

"All the decisions about this kind of activities are made by the B-H
Presidency, and, therefore, I would not know at this moment what
exactly this is about," Minister Pendes said briefly.

While the administration from Moscow is "making accusations" about the
weapons from Bosnia-Hercegovina being used by the Georgian regime for
genocide against the South Ossetians, the B-H Foreign Ministry had no
official answer at the time of publishing this issue of our
newspaper. Its only comment was that "it was a very serious
accusation." Their ignorance about the most recent Russian protest is
symptomatic, because it was the Russian Embassy in Sarajevo that filed
a protest note last year against the agreement, which had already been
concluded, based on which the Bratstvo Arms Factory in Novi Travnik
and the Pretis Factory from Vogosca [near Sarajevo] were supposed to
export weapons worth more than 10 million euros to Georgia.

Weapons From War

It was about the "Hurricane" multiple rocket launcher, preserved from
the war, which the B-H army has, meanwhile, removed from its arsenal.

Ismet Briga, director of the directorate for the specialized industry,
has said that there was an approval from the B-H Defence Ministry and
the Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Relations for the delivery,
that is, for the export of the weapons to Georgia.

[Box] Agreements Waited for Minister’s Approval

The contested agreements were concluded and were waiting for the
approval of Foreign Minister Sven Alkalaj, exactly because of the fact
that Russia opposed them through its diplomatic network, by sending
the letter of protest to Sarajevo. The diplomatic protest letter
stated that Russia did not have good relations with Georgia, and that
it would not be good to deliver to Georgia the weapons such as the
"Hurricane" multiple rocket launchers, which were preserved from the
war.

[Box] They Also Accused Serbia of Exporting Weapons

Even though the export of weapons to Georgia and Armenia was stopped
in 2006, based on the recommendation of their [Serbian] Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, because of the status of Kosovo, Russia is also
accusing Serbia of exporting weapons. The press statement says that,
beside Serbia, the following countries also offered military
assistance to Georgia: the United States, Bulgaria, Great Britain,
Hungary, Greece, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Turkey, France, the Czech
Republic, Israel, Bosnia-Hercegovina, and Ukraine! The Russian
accusations hit the Serb diplomacy, which is a political friend of the
Russian Federation.

[translated]

Events in Georgia will have impact on Nagorno-Karabakh conflict – EU

Interfax, Russia
Aug 16 2008

Events in Georgia will have impact on Nagorno-Karabakh conflict – EU
diplomat

BAKU Ag 16

The European Union is concerned about the situation in Georgia and the
possibility that the events in that country could have an impact on
Azerbaijan and Armenia and on the settlement of the conflict over
Nagorno-Karabakh, which could be quite strong, EU Special
Representative for the South Caucasus Peter Semneby said on the Azeri
TV channel ANS.

Considering that Azerbaijan and Armenia are states neighboring
Georgia, the latest events will also influence the situation in these
countries themselves and could cause certain concerns, which is a
problem for the EU, whose goal is to see the South Caucasus open and
prospering, Semneby said.

Economist: A scripted war; Russia and Georgia

From: "Katia M. Peltekian" <[email protected]>
Subject: Economist: A scripted war; Russia and Georgia

The Economist
August 16, 2008
U.S. Edition

A scripted war; Russia and Georgia

Gori, Moscow and Tbilisi

Both sides are to blame for the Russian-Georgian war, but it ran
according to a Russian plan

GORI was Stalin?s birthplace. Did his statue in Stalin Square smile
approvingly on Vladimir Putin as Russian tanks rolled past and the few
residents left wandered around the bombed ghost town, without purpose?
In 1921 the Bolsheviks occupied Georgia. Now Russia, for the first
time since the collapse of the Soviet Union, had invaded a sovereign
country.

Georgia was once the jewel of its empire, and Russia has never
psychologically accepted it as a sovereign state. Nostalgia for the
Soviet empire has long been the leitmotif of Russia?s ideology. This
month it re-enacted its fantasy with aircraft and ground troops. It
occupied Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the two separatist regions of
Georgia, blockaded the vital port of Poti, sank Georgian vessels,
destroyed some infrastructure, blocked the main east-west highway and
bombed and partially occupied towns in Georgia, including Gori.

Western diplomats and politicians rushed to Moscow and to Georgia?s
capital, Tbilisi, trying to broker a ceasefire. The lobby of Tbilisi?s
main hotel resembled a United Nations conference. On August 12th
Russia, having pulverised the small Georgian army, decided it was time
to stop. A few hours before France?s president, Nicolas Sarkozy, was
due in Moscow, Russia?s president, Dmitry Medvedev, announced an end
to Russia?s "peace enforcement operation". The aggressor, he said "is
punished and its military forces are unravelled". He then signed the
ceasefire plan that Mr Sarkozy brought to Moscow.

That same day, hundreds of thousands of Georgians flooded Rustaveli
Avenue, Tbilisi?s main street. They read poetry and sang
songs. Georgia, a small, dignified, theatrical nation, had held
together. In the evening they lit candles and waved flags: Georgian,
Ukrainian, Armenian. On the same spot almost 20 years ago Soviet
troops had brutally disbanded a demonstration which had declared
Georgia?s independence.

Yet it was not until America?s George Bush delivered a stark warning
to Russia late on August 13th that Russia began to pull back all its
forces. Mr Bush sent his secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, to
Georgia and told his defence secretary, Robert Gates, to organise a
humanitarian-aid operation. The first American aircraft landed at
Tbilisi airport soon afterwards.

So what was all this about? Clearly, more than the two separatist
regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, as Russia claimed. It was also
about more than simply punishing Georgia for its aspirations to join
NATO, or even trying to displace Mikheil Saakashvili, Georgia?s
hot-headed president, who has irritated Russia ever since he came to
power in the "rose revolution" in 2003. It is about Russia, resurgent
and nationalistic, pushing its way back into the Caucasus and chasing
others out, and reversing the losses Russia feels it has suffered
since the end of the cold war.

The fact that Georgia is backed by the West made it a particularly
appealing target. In fighting Georgia, Russia fought a proxy war with
the Westâ??especially with America (which had upgraded the
Georgian army). All this was a payback for the humiliation that Russia
suffered in the 1990s, and its answer to NATO?s bombing of Belgrade in
1999 and to America?s invasion of Iraq. "If you can do it, so can we,"
was the logic.

Russia was also drawing a thick red line on the map of Europe which
the West and NATO should not cross. And, as in any war, there were
powerful subjective reasons in play. Mr Putin?s personal hatred of Mr
Saakashvili, and his ability to deploy the entire Russian army to
fulfil his vendetta, made war all but inevitable.

With the smoke of battle still in the air, it is impossible to say who
actually started it. But, given the scale and promptness of Russia?s
response, the script must have been written in Moscow.

The rattling of sabres has been heard in both capitals for months, if
not years. Russia imposed sanctions on Georgia and rounded up
Georgians in Moscow. In revenge for the recognition of Kosovo?s
independence earlier this year, Mr Putin established legal ties with
the governments of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. When Mr Saakashvili
called Mr Putin to complain and point out that the West supported
Georgian integrity, Mr Putin, who favours earthy language, is said to
have told him to stick Western statements up his backside.

In the late spring, Russia and Georgia came close to a clash over
Abkhazia but diplomats pulled the two sides apart. A war in Georgia
became a favourite subject in Moscow?s rumour mill. There were bomb
explosions in Abkhazia and the nearby Russian town of Sochi, the venue
of the 2014 Winter Olympics.

Suddenly, the action switched to South Ossetia, a much smaller
rebellious region divided from Russia by the Caucasus mountains. In
early July Russia staged a massive military exercise on the border
with South Ossetia. At the same time Russian jets flew over the region
"to establish the situation" and "cool down Georgia?s hot-heads",
according to the Russians.

The change of scene should not, in retrospect, be surprising. Unlike
Abkhazia, which is separated from the rest of Georgia by a buffer
zone, South Ossetia is a tiny patchwork of
villagesâ??Georgian and South Ossetianâ??which was
much easier to drag into a war. It is headed by a thuggish former
Soviet official, Eduard Kokoity, and run by the Russian security
services. It lives off smuggling and Russian money. As Yulia Latynina,
a Russian journalist, puts it, "South Ossetia is a joint venture
between KGB generals and an Ossetian gangster, who jointly utilise the
money disbursed by Moscow for fighting with Georgia."

In early August Georgian and South Ossetian separatists exchanged fire
and explosive attacks. South Ossetia blew up a truck carrying Georgian
policemen and attacked Georgian villages; Georgia fired back at the
capital of South Ossetia, Tskhinvali. On August 7th Georgian and South
Ossetian officials were due to have direct talks facilitated by a
Russian diplomat. But according to Temur Iakobashvili, a Georgian
minister, the Russian diplomat never turned up.

What happened next is less clear. Russia claims that Mr Saakashvili
treacherously broke a unilateral ceasefire he had just announced,
ordering a massive offensive on Tskhinvali, ethnically cleansing South
Ossetian villages and killing as many as 2,000 people. According to
the Georgians, the ceasefire was broken from the South Ossetian
side. However, what triggered the Georgian response, says Mr
Saakashvili, was the movement of Russian troops through the Roki
tunnel that connects South Ossetia to Russia. Matthew Bryza, an
official at the State Department, says he was woken at 2am on August
7th to be told that the Georgians were lifting the ceasefire. "I tried
to persuade them not to do it," he says.

That same night, Georgia started to shell and invade Tskhinvali. Then
the Russian army moved inâ??the same troops that had taken
part in the military exercise a month earlier. The picture Russia
presented to the world seemed clear: Georgia was a reckless and
dangerous aggressor and Russia had an obligation, as a peacekeeper in
the region, to protect the victims.

Russia?s response was predictable. One thing which almost all
observers agree on is that Mr Saakashvili made a catastrophic mistake
by walking into the Russian trap. As Carl Bildt, Sweden?s foreign
minister, puts it: "When you have a choice between doing nothing and
doing a stupid thing, it is better to do nothing." But Mr Saakashvili,
a compulsive risk-taker, did the second. Even now he is defiant: if
the clock were turned back, he says his response would be the
same. "Any Georgian government that would have done differently would
have fallen immediately," he says.

Mr Saakashvili bears responsibility for mismanaging disputes between
Georgia and the enclaves, pushing them firmly into Russian hands. Yet
his mistakes and follies notwithstanding, Russia?s claim that it was
"enforcing peace" is preposterous. Despite the terrible atrocities
which both South Ossetia and Abkhazia suffered in the early 1990s from
the brutal and nationalist government of the Georgian president, Zviad
Gamsakhurdia, South Ossetians got on with the Georgians much better
than the Abkhaz did. They traded heavily in a smugglers? market (which
Mr Saakashvili shut down in 2004) and lived alongside each other
peaceably.

"Georgians always helped me and I don?t feel any pressure now," says a
South Ossetian woman who got trapped in Gori after the Russian
attack. This is not a comment frequently heard in Abkhazia. Mr
Saakashvili?s nationalistic approach to separatist conflicts certainly
did not help, but had it not been for Russia supporting South
Ossetia?s corrupt regime, the two sides would not have gone to
war. And instead of containing the conflict Russia deliberately spread
it to Abkhazia.

Russia was prepared for the war not only militarily, but also
ideologically. Its campaign was crude but effective. While its forces
were dropping bombs on Georgia, the Kremlin bombarded its own
population with an astonishing, even by Soviet standards, propaganda
campaign. One Russian deputy reflected the mood: "Today, it is quite
obvious who the parties in the conflict are. They are the US, UK,
Israel who participated in training the Georgian army, Ukraine who
supplied it with weapons. We are facing a situation where there is a
NATO aggression against us."

In blue jeans and a sports jacket, Mr Putin, cast as the hero of the
war, flew to the Russian side of the Caucasus mountain range to hear,
first-hand, hair-raising stories from refugees that ranged from
burning young girls alive to stabbing babies and running tanks over
old women and children. These stories were whipped up into
anti-Georgian and anti-Western hysteria. Russian politicians compared
Mr Saakashvili to Saddam Hussein and Hitler and demanded that he face
an international tribunal. What Russia was doing, it seemed, was no
different from what the West had done in its "humanitarian"
interventions.

There was one difference, however. Russia was dealing with a crisis
that it had deliberately created. Its biggest justification for
military intervention was that it was formally protecting its own
citizens. Soon after Mr Putin?s arrival in the Kremlin in 2000, Russia
started to hand out passports to Abkhaz and South Ossetians, while
also claiming the role of a neutral peacekeeper in the region. When
the fighting broke out between Georgia and South Ossetia, Russia,
which had killed tens of thousands of its own citizens in Chechnya,
argued that it had to defend its nationals.

But as Mr Bildt argues, "we have reason to remember how Hitler used
this very doctrine little more than half a century ago to undermine
and attack substantial parts of central Europe." In the process of
portraying Georgia as a fascist-led country, Russia was displaying the
syndrome it was condemning. And it did not seem to mind when, as Human
Rights Watch (HRW) reports, ethnic Georgian villages were looted and
set on fire by South Ossetian militia. "The remaining residents of
these villages are facing desperate conditions, with no means of
survival, no help, no protection, and nowhere to go," says Tanya
Lokshina of HRW.

The biggest victims of this war are civilians in South Ossetia and
Georgia. Militarily, Mr Putin has won, hardly surprisingly. But all
Russia has got from its victory so far is a ruined reputation, broken
ties with Georgia, control over separatist enclaves (which it had
anyway) and fear from other former Soviet republics. Mr Saakashvili,
who promised to reintegrate the country when he was elected president,
has made this prospect all but unattainable.

The six-point peace plan negotiated by Mr Sarkozy recognises Georgian
sovereignty but not its integrity. In practice, this means that Russia
will not allow Georgia back into Abkhazia and South Ossetia. According
to the same plan, Russia should withdraw its troops to where they were
before the war broke out.

The ceasefire is signed, but it still needs to be implemented. The
early signs were not good with looting, killing and rapes in villages
in both Georgia and South Ossetia. On August 13th the Americans
announced that they would send military aircraft and naval forces to
deliver humanitarian aid to the Georgians. This seemed to make more
impression on the Russians, who soon began to withdraw, than the
agreement in principle by the European Union to send monitors to
supervise the ceasefire. A NATO meeting has also been called to
reassess relations with Russia.

Much will now depend on how far Russia wants to go and whether it
wants Mr Saakashvili?s head on a plate or not. In a confidential
conversation with Condoleezza Rice, America?s secretary of state,
Sergei Lavrov, Russia?s foreign minister, declared that Mr Saakashvili
should go. The conversation was made public at the UN Security
Council, infuriating the Russians. Regime change is a Western
invention, Russia retorted; Russia will not try to overthrow Mr
Saakashvili, but will simply refuse to deal with him.

Other former Soviet republics, including Azerbaijan, Armenia, and
Ukraine, have been dealt a lesson, about both Russia?s capacity to
exert its influence and the weakness of Western commitments. America?s
inability to stop or deter Russia from attacking its smaller
neighbours has been devastatingly obvious in Georgia over the past
week.

Yet the people who are likely in the end to pay the biggest price for
the attack on Georgia are the Russians. This price will go well beyond
any sanctions America or the European Union could impose. Like any
foreign aggression, it will lead to further stifling of civil freedoms
in Russia.

The war in Georgia has demonstrated convincingly who is in charge in
Russia. Just as the war in Chechnya helped Mr Putin?s rise to power in
1999, the war in Georgia may now keep him in power for years to
come. As Lilia Shevtsova of the Carnegie Moscow Centre argues, if Mr
Medvedev still had a chance to preside over a period of liberalisation
of Russia, this opportunity is now gone. The war in Georgia will make
Russia more isolated. Worst of all, it will further corrode the
already weak moral fabric of Russian society, making it more
aggressive and nationalistic. The country has been heading in the
direction of an authoritarian, nationalistic, corporatist state for
some time. The war with Georgia could tip it over the edge.

Economist: The dangers of the safe route; Caucasian pipelines

The Economist
August 16, 2008
U.S. Edition

The dangers of the safe route; Caucasian pipelines

How conflicts in the Caucasus affect Western oil

Georgia?s pipelines to the West weren?t bombed but they remain
vulnerable

IT?S not just the Russian-Georgian conflict that has made August such
a rotten month for the West?s favourite oil pipeline. On August 5th a
pumping station on the 1,100-mile (1,760km) Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC)
pipeline in eastern Turkey was set ablaze. The PKK Kurdish separatists
claimed responsibility. The entire route, which had been carrying
850,000 barrels of Caspian crude oil a day to Western markets, shut
down and world oil prices, which had been falling, nudged up
again. BP, which spent $4 billion on BTC and still manages it, put a
brave face on things, saying that the disruption would be
temporary. But the station was still burning when Georgia and Russia
went to war two days later.

The company?s other oil pipeline, Baku-Supsa, carrying crude to
Georgia?s Black Sea coast (now blockaded by Russian warships), had
only recently re-opened but was also forced to shut down. On August
12th, even as the conflict was fading, BP stopped putting gas into the
Baku-Erzurum gas pipeline. The only pipeline from Azerbaijan that was
fully operational this week is the one running through Russian soil to
the port of Novorossiisk.

For the past decade Georgia has been championed as a reliable country
through which new pipelines, safely controlled by Western companies,
could bypass both Russia and Iran. On the face of it, the past week
has made a mockery of that claim. But not completely. Georgia will
point out that its energy infrastructure survived the war unscathed:
no pipeline was bombed. Russia, mindful of the need for good relations
with Azerbaijan and Turkey, has been careful to point out that this
was not an oil war.

Yet the crisis’including the dangerously unresolved dispute between
Armenia and Azerbaijan over Karabakh’raises wider issues. South
Caucasus is supposed to be the location for the next generation of
so-called "fourth corridor" projects, by means of which Western
strategists dream of ending Europe?s dependence on Russian gas and
getting Caspian gas to European markets.

The jewel in this scheme, the Nabucco pipeline’designed to ship
Caspian gas to Europe in 2013’is already in trouble for lack of
unequivocal European support, a rival Russian scheme called South
Stream and the fact that there is no major Western energy company
based upstream in Turkmenistan to lobby for the deal. One of the first
foreign-policy initiatives by Russia?s president, Dmitry Medvedev, was
to court Azerbaijani and Turkmen leaders in order to persuade them to
sell their gas to his country. With an eye on events in Georgia, they
must now decide how to respond to his friendly advice.

Russian ombudsman accuses Georgia of deliberate killing of civilians

Interfax, Russia
Aug 15 2008

Russian ombudsman accuses Georgia of deliberate killing of civilians

Moscow, 15 August: A commission of the Public Chamber has proof that
Georgian military have killed children and pregnant women in South
Ossetia, Aleksandr Brod, member of the chamber and director of the
Moscow human rights bureau, has said. "Little children were crushed by
tanks and pregnant women were shot at. There was pinpoint targeting of
flats in residential areas. Grenades were thrown in basements where
peaceful civilians were hiding from shelling," Aleksandr Brod told
Interfax on Friday [15 August].

The ombudsman said that the facts and witness accounts that have been
collected make it possible to draw the conclusion that the Georgian
leadership had planned "the physical annihilation of the entire people
of the unrecognised republic".

Aleksandr Brod is member of a commission investigating military crimes
in South Ossetia. "The number of people wishing to help us is
growing. Journalists and public organizations are coming forward. They
bring us written accounts, photographs and video footage," he
said. Aleksandr Brod has suggested that Georgia’s military crimes be
assessed as comparable to the Holocaust and the Armenian genocide.

NATO to blame for conflict in Caucasus region

ABC Newspaper, Spain
Aug 14 2008

NATO to blame for conflict in Caucasus region

[Commentary by Javier Ruperez: "Georgia, Kosovo: so far, yet so
close"]

A few days ago – on 21 July in ABC – I argued that Ukraine and Georgia
should become NATO members, meeting the wishes expressed by both
countries in this sense. Given the tragic events that are taking place
in South Ossetia, which forms part of Georgia, the least that can be
argued is that if NATO had met those demands, the Georgian troops
would not have intervened militarily in the separatist territory, nor
would the Russian troops have invaded Georgian territory.

At first glance, the Georgian President’s decision to put an end to
the secession in South Ossetia by force seems to be an obscene
miscalculation. The history of tensions between Tbilisi and Moscow
since the Caucasian Republic proclaimed independence is long and the
constant meddling of the Russian authorities in Georgian internal
affairs is sufficiently known. The secessionist territories of
Abkhazia and South Ossetia have been openly backed by Russia and the
secessionist leaders of these territories have never concealed their
affection for the Kremlin. A military action against South Ossetia by
Georgia had of necessity to result in a confrontation with the heirs
of the Soviet Union. And it does not take a military expert to know
where the reality of power lies.

If the Georgian attack had been planned to coincide with the beginning
of the Beijing Olympics, expecting that the non-existent Olympic truce
would prevent Russia from reacting or to find help in the West, the
decision could not have been more short-sighted. The Russians are not
willing to jeopardize its position in the Caucasus, and the West,
apart from its usual expressions of solidarity, is not planning to
engage its forces in a conflict aimed at reunifying Georgia. On the
other hand, it is obvious that the news about recent clashes have not
been welcomed in European capitals, not only because of the reminder
they contain, but due to the nuisance they entail.

And, in fact, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili might have made a
mistake in beginning hostilities, in choosing the appropriate moment
to launch the attack, in the reasons that led him to make such a
serious decision, or in assessing the consequences. And many people
will certainly be willing to rebuke him for it, namely all those who
closed their eyes to the dormant conflicts in Georgia and other parts
of the Caucasus, hoping that time, like a magic ointment, will help to
resolve them peacefully.

However, demanding Georgia’s territorial integrity be respected was no
mistake. The secessions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, which were
systematically encouraged by Russia, have contributed to destabilizing
Georgia, as happened in Upper Karavaj, the Armenian enclave in
Azerbaijan, and the Dniester Republic, Moldova’s eastern strip, which
was chosen as a retirement haven by Russian senior military officials
and kept by Moscow as its particular stronghold. The numerous
mediation efforts made by the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) to stamp out these sources of tension
have been systematically hindered by Moscow’s inflexibility. It is no
wonder that the legitimate holders of the respective national
sovereignties are attempting to impose by force what they were denied
by reason and law. We should not forget the continuous and blatant
provocations carried out by Russia in the pursuit of its interests and
of the destabilization of its rival. A few days ago, Tbilisi denounced
and the international observers confirmed the constant violations of
the Georgian airspace by Russian aircraft. Saakashvili does not seem
to be a wonder of diplomatic self-restraint, but we should ask
ourselves: Who would be able to keep calm with such aggressive and
surly neighbours?

If NATO had been favourably disposed towards Georgia’s accession to
the club, Georgia’s decision to intervene militarily in South Ossetia
would not have been made. The consultation and decisionmaking
mechanisms within the Alliance would have curbed the eagerness of the
pro-American Georgian president. And, of course, the Russians should
have taken into account the costs stemming from an attack on a NATO
member. Everything has been thrown into the bottomless pit of lost
opportunities.

And South Ossetia will probably be annexed de facto, if not de jure,
to Russia’s sovereignty and to North Ossetia. Russia’s gross violation
of the border and territorial integrity of a sovereign state, which is
a member of the UN and the OSCE, will result in many reproaches
against Russia, several useless sessions of the UN Security Council, a
significant rise in international tension in the region, and nothing
else. Is anyone in the West willing to die for Georgia’s territorial
integrity? And, furthermore, who will believe in the demands
advocating the return to that territorial integrity when a few weeks
ago the same people demanding it were not ashamed to deny it to Serbia
by recognizing Kosovo’s independence?

Russia has not resigned itself to losing the Soviet Union’s
territorial extension and the western countries have not assessed
properly the consequences of the post-imperial syndrome. Washington
insists on dealing with Moscow as if Stalin – who, by the way, was
Georgian – continued to occupy the Kremlin and the western European
countries oscillate between being afraid of the bad-tempered Russian
bear [as published] and flattery towards it as an energy power. The
result is a mistaken and unsteady policy: Kosovo should have never
been granted independence and Georgia and Ukraine should have been
accepted into NATO, as were Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia. Today,
with the Russian troops in Georgia, it is too late to do something,
apart from attempting to settle serious problems and prevent tension
from reaching a point of no return.

International politics have never been a paragon of coherence, hence
they are not very different from any human being’s life. But the
mistakes made by those who control and implement those policies
usually lead to risks that result in considerable disasters.
Everything usually begins with small miscalculations, insignificant
improvisations, and hesitations. One day is the mistake in Kosovo; the
next day the refusal to grant NATO membership to Georgia, Ukraine, and
Macedonia. Later, it may be the monstrous refusal to start EU
accession talks with Turkey. Shortly before this, it was the untinged
belief that the intelligence services chiefs – how ironic! – know
everything, even the number of weapons of mass destruction that the
enemy has in its possession. Thus, step by step, we have found the
Russian troops 60 km away from Tbilisi. Within the cacophony [as
published], nobody is in charge of counting the dead. After all, as
Macbeth said, life "is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and
fury, signifying nothing." Perhaps, Brussels, Washington, and Moscow
should read Shakespeare before it is too late.

[translated]