McCain: Georgia Conflict Is The ‘First Serious Crisis Internationall

MCCAIN: GEORGIA CONFLICT IS THE ‘FIRST SERIOUS CRISIS INTERNATIONALLY SINCE THE END OF THE COLD WAR.’
By Damozel

The Moderate Voice
August 15th, 2008

I am becoming quite worried about McCain.

RockRichard at VetVoice says bluntly:

Forget about Afghanistan, Osama bin Laden and REAL Al-Qaeda. That
isn’t a major conflict. Let’s not dwell too much on figuring out this
Iraq problem. It isn’t an international crisis. And maybe he was just
having a "senior moment" and completely forgot about the Gulf War,
apartheid, and genocide in Darfur, Rwanda and the Balkans.

If you are reading this and are currently deployed or about to deploy
which at the current OPTEMPO should include anyone who is active duty,
keep that chin up. Its not like this is a crisis or anything. And
if you’re a loved one of someone who made the ultimate sacrifice,
remember that Senator McCain seems to think that your loved one died
for something so trivial that it doesn’t even break the "crisis"
threshold.

Andrew Sullivan asks:

What if Obama had said this?…. It’s this kind of emotional hyperbole
that should worry people about McCain in the White House. He’s a
drama queen on these issues. With a finger on the trigger.

Michael Stickings writes:

[McCain is] providing yet more evidence — and it’s really piling up
— that he is not the straight-talking maverick with international
relations expertise…but a dim-witted buffoon who actually knows very
little about the world and who is prepared to do and say anything to
score political points….

Let’s face it, McCain has no clue what to do about the conflict in
Georgia. His message, however, is this: "It’s the Cold War all over
again! I was there! I get it! Russia is the Evil Empire! I know what
to do! Vote for me!"

And this is what really bothers me.

McCain is exploiting an extremely serious situation that will affect
US and Russian relations for years to come in order to score political
points. And they called Barack Obama "presumptuous"? Consider this
(from The Washington Post):

Standing behind a lectern in Michigan this week, with two trusted
senators ready to do his bidding, John McCain seemed to forget for
a moment that he was only running for president.

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili says he talks to McCain, a
personal friend, several times a day. McCain’s top foreign policy
adviser, Randy Scheunemann, was until recently a paid lobbyist
for Georgia’s government. McCain also announced this week that
two of his closest allies, Sens. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) and
Joseph I. Lieberman (I-Conn.), would travel to Georgia’s capital of
Tbilisi on his behalf, after a similar journey by Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice.

The extent of McCain’s involvement in the military conflict in Georgia
appears remarkable among presidential candidates, who traditionally
have kept some distance from unfolding crises out of deference to
whoever is occupying the White House. The episode also follows months
of sustained GOP criticism of Democratic Sen. Barack Obama, who was
accused of acting too presidential for, among other things, briefly
adopting a campaign seal and taking a trip abroad that included a
huge rally in Berlin. (WaPo)

Obama made a speech and shook hands with a couple of people. He
also apparently stirred up the Iraqis and got all that discussion
going about withdrawal deadlines. He was criticized for meddling in
foreign policy.

But this is several notches further up the meddling scale. My
colleague remarked:

John McCain says he is speaking on the phone every day to Georgia’s
President…. Doesn’t Bush mind?….. I’d mind. For once I kind of
admire Bush’s restraint.

I’d be like, "Dude? Excuse me; I believe I am still the president
here?"

For all the Cold War comparisons I’m seeing, the situation in Georgia
involves other factors (such as the argument of the separatist enclaves
within Georgia and the matter of the Georgian president’s initial
attack on South Ossetia). Nobody’s hands are completely clean with
respect to the factors which initiated the conflict. A nuanced response
is needed in dealing with Georgia’s territorial integrity and with the
people within its borders. The bad blood goes back hundreds of years.

On August 11, The Christian Science Monitor published an article by
Professor Charles King of Georgetown University. (Professor King is
professor of international affairs in the Edmund A. Walsh School of
Foreign Service at Georgetown University…and the author of "The
Ghost of Freedom: A History of The Caucasus.") He wrote:

Russia illegally attacked Georgia and imperiled a small and feeble
neighbor. But by dispatching his own ill-prepared military to resolve a
secessionist dispute by force, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili
has managed to lead his country down the path of a disastrous and
ultimately self-defeating war….

[T]his is not a repeat of the Soviet Union’s aggressive behavior of
the last century. So far at least, Russia’s aims have been clear:
to oust Georgian forces from the territory of South Ossetia,
one of two secessionist enclaves in Georgia, and to chasten a
Saakashvili government that Russia perceives as hot-headed and
unpredictable.Regardless of the conflict’s origins, the West must
continue to act diplomatically to push Georgia and Russia back to the
pre-attacks status quo. The United States should make it clear that
Saakashvili has seriously miscalculated the meaning of his partnership
with Washington, and that Georgia and Russia must step back before
they do irreparable damage to their relations with the US, NATO,
and the European Union.

The attack on South Ossetia, along with Russia’s inexcusable reaction,
have pushed both sides down the road toward all-out war – a war that
could ignite a host of other territorial and ethnic disputes in the
Caucasus as a whole. (CSM)

He also wrote:

Like the Balkans in the 1990s, the central problems of this region are
about the dark politics of ethnic revival and territorial struggle. The
region is home to scores of brewing border disputes and dreams of
nationalist homelands….

Farther afield, other secessionist entities and recognized governments
in neighboring countries – from Nagorno-Karabakh to Chechnya – are
eyeing the situation. The outcome of the Russo-Georgian struggle
will determine whether these other disputes move toward peace or
once again produce the barbaric warfare and streams of refugees that
defined the Caucasus more than a decade ago.

For Georgia, this war has been a disastrous miscalculation. South
Ossetia and Abkhazia are now completely lost. It is almost impossible
to imagine a scenario under which these places – home to perhaps
200,000 people – would ever consent to coming back into a Georgian
state they perceive as an aggressor. (CSM)

Calling out Russia for its inexcusable opportunism (and previous
meddling in the separatist movements with the exact intention of
stirring up this sort of trouble) or even–if it is possible–punishing
them for it is not going to solve Georgia’s internal problems. The
separatist enclaves have not been under Georgia’s control since
the Nineties. Rightly or wrongly, they do not acknowledge Georgia’s
sovereignty over them or their territories.

The BBC’s Sarah Rainsford has reported: "Many Ossetians I met both in
Tskhinvali and in the main refugee camp in Russia are furious about
what has happened to their city.

"They are very clear who they blame: Georgia’s President Mikhail
Saakashvili, who sent troops to re-take control of this breakaway
region."

Human Rights Watch concluded after an on-the-ground inspection:
"Witness accounts and the timing of the damage would point to Georgian
fire accounting for much of the damage described [in Tskhinvali]." (BBC
News)

The Bush administration is working with the EU to resolve the
situation. Bush has told the Russians to get out now.

McCain needs to let them get on with it. But will McCain, who seems,
as Sullivan says, to be caught up in the drama, who claims close
friendship with the Georgian president, and who said "We are all
Georgians," simply exacerbate the situation? On August 13, The New
York Times wrote:

Despite Western governments’ public statements of support for
Saakashvili, some Western diplomats now privately say that the Georgian
leadership or military made a serious and possibly criminal mistake
last week by launching a massive barrage against the South Ossetian
capital of Tskhinvali, which inevitably led to major civilian deaths
and casualties.

Russian officials have said 2,000 people were killed in the Georgian
offensive, a figure that has not been confirmed independently. But
it is indisputable that large numbers of civilians were killed in
and around Tskhinvali. (Reuters)

What I’d really like to see is for McCain to disengage from any actual
meddling at this juncture. He should step away from the phone and
recall his two envoys.

I’m sure McCain means well. But in a situation like this, good
intentions count for very little.

At Obsidian Wings, Dr. Hilzoy says:

Like the neocons surrounding him, McCain’s worldview was forged in
the fires of the Cold War. To him, foreign policy is essentially
about nation-states, some of which are evil, some of which are
good. In McCain’s eyes, there’s always an imperialist existential
threat threatening to expand and gobble up the world. Yesterday it
was communism. Today it’s "Islamofascism." Tomorrow, probably China.

In reality, the Russia-Georgia dispute involved a tiny ethnic enclave
with deep historical ties to Russia that resides in a tiny post-Soviet
Union country. If Russia wanted to re-conquer Eastern Europe, it’s
an odd place to start.

But rather than seeing the situation as the complicated mix of history
and ideology that it is, McCain sees it as a reaffirmation of the Cold
War worldview that informs his foreign policy. A man who wears red
glasses sees everything as red. And so, it his pre-existing assumptions
(and not the facts) that are driving his response….

if the Georgia crisis had happened on President McCain’s watch,
these assumptions could similarly lead to some bad results. The worst
result of all of course would be military entanglement. But even if
McCain wasn’t quite that dumb, he could needlessly antagonize Russia,
who remains (for good or bad) a key and nuclear-powered partner on a
whole host of transnational issues and crises. That’s not to say that
we shouldn’t speak up against an overbroad military response. But the
response needs to be proportional. Citing disapproval (even strong
disapproval) is one thing — "we are all Georgians" is quite another.

Mankind managed to survive the first Cold War without destroying
itself. I’d prefer not to have another roll of the dice just to show
how hairy-chested we are. (Obsidian Wings)

This isn’t about acquiring foreign policy cred; civilian lives are
at stake all over Georgia. Like all civilians everywhere, they’re
inevitably pawns in a larger international chess game. But they
shouldn’t be pawns in the American presidential election as well.

Ankara: Retired Generals Vanish From Scene

RETIRED GENERALS VANISH FROM SCENE

Today’s Zaman
16 August 2008, Saturday
Turkey

Parallel to the capture of retired Gen. Veli Kucuk and other military
personnel and civilians early this year over their alleged role in
the Ergenekon terror organization, retired generals in particular
and former uniformed men in general are nowhere to be seen in the
Turkish media.

The number of retired generals appearing both on television and
in print expressing their views on Turkey and the war in Iraq had
mushroomed since the United States invaded Iraq in 2003. The views
expressed carried with them extreme political content rather than
focusing on analyzing the military aspects of the war — a reflection
of the Turkish Armed Forces’ (TSK) traditional involvement in
political affairs.

These retired generals also used the media spotlight as an opportunity
to attack the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) from
time to time on several foreign and domestic policy issues, triggering
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s comments last year in which he
described the retired generals as "provocateurs."

In November of last year, the TSK prohibited retired officers from
making statements concerning the time they served in the military
to the media, threatening to take away benefits such as subsidized
lodging at military-owned residential complexes.

It was later understood that the ban was directed at retired officers
who were critical of the TSK — in particular after the outlawed
Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) attacked the Daglıca military
headquarters, located in the Southeast near the Iraqi border, in
November of last year, killing 13 Turkish soldiers.

Some retired generals who served in the region in the past accused
the TSK of negligence, and the attack paved the way for Turkey to go
ahead with an aerial bombardment and a ground operation into northern
Iraq. The US supplied real-time intelligence for this incursion.

When Umit Kardat, a retired military judge who is outspoken on
military affairs, once told the media that he was denied entry to
military lodging, speculation arose over whether the military had
banned retired officers who were critical of the TSK and its practices
from enjoying such privileges.

Since the TSK issued the ban, retired officers have continued to appear
in the media, but have limited their criticism to AK Party practices,
though a handful of the retired officers have continued criticizing
the TSK as well.

However, since an investigation was launched into Ergenekon, a crime
network accused of plotting to overthrow the government, soon followed
by an indictment, and since an İstanbul court agreed to hear the case
on Oct. 20, almost all retired officers — by now familiar faces to
Turkish audiences — are nowhere to be seen.

Some retired generals, regular writers for the Cumhuriyet daily —
whose publisher and columnist, İlhan Selcuk, was accused of being
a leader of the Ergenekon terrorist organization and whose Ankara
representative, Mustafa Balbay, was also detained over his alleged
links to the gang — have also stopped writing articles for the daily.

A military source told Today’s Zaman that with the arrest of some
senior generals and the release of the Ergenekon indictment, these
are critical moments. Generals, out of concern for being linked to
Ergenekon or being arrested for being a part of it, have chosen to
no longer appear in the media.

An İstanbul court will begin hearing the trial of 86 defendants,
46 of whom are under arrest, charged with either forming or being
a member of a terrorist organization or of inciting public unrest
and encouraging subordination within the military with the aim of
toppling the ruling AK Party.

As details of the Ergenekon indictment continue to be published by
Turkish dailies, it has become clear that this organization, acting
like a state within a state ("deep state"), has existed for quite
some time and was allegedly behind many criminal acts and politically
motivated assassinations in the country in addition to planning to
overthrow the ruling AK Party government. These plans have only been
a part of its many alleged unlawful acts. Operations against those
allegedly linked to Ergenekon continue. The İstanbul residence
of retired Col. Arif Dogan, said to be a founder of JİTEM — an
intelligence unit in the gendarmerie whose existence is officially
denied, was raided on Thursday night. The police seized ammunition,
including 280 hand grenades and other weapons. An additional two
individuals were detained in Ankara.

Jail food just got better

Meanwhile, inmates and employees of Kandıra Prison in Kocaeli report
satisfaction over the higher quality of food now available to them,
which they say happened thanks to a large number of high-profile
Ergenekon suspects, including retired senior generals.

Inmates and wards at the Kocaeli prison say that the food has improved
since retired senior generals Å~^ener Eruygur, who also heads the
Ataturk Thought Association (ADD), and HurÅ~_it Tolon were moved to
the prison. The inmates say that, in addition to the higher quality,
the amount of meat in meals has also significantly increased.

However, soon the senior generals will be moved to another prison in
Silivri, after which inmates and prison wards fear that the food will
return to its former state. Current guests at Kandıra Prison include
superstars of the crime world such as Sedat Peker, Alattin Cakıcı,
Erol Evcil and Vedat Ergin. Ogun Samast, the teenager who shot dead
Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in 2007 – a crime of which
Ergenekon is also suspected — is also an inmate at Kandıra prison.

16 August 2008, Saturday

LALE SARIİBRAHİMOÄ~^LU ANKARA

–Boundary_(ID_iEEBcFR8SVqQSYnTREbkvg)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Ankara: Yerevan Scraps Visas For Turkish Soccer Fans

YEREVAN SCRAPS VISAS FOR TURKISH SOCCER FANS

Today’s Zaman
16 August 2008, Saturday
Turkey

In a fresh overture to Ankara, Armenia decided on Thursday to
unilaterally suspend its visa regime with Turkey to facilitate the
arrival of Turkish fans for the upcoming first-ever match between
the two countries’ national football teams, the Armenian media have
reported.

The Armenian government stated that Turkish citizens traveling to
Armenia from Sept. 1-6 will not be required to obtain entry visas,
the online news portal armenialiberty.org said in a report posted on
Thursday. "The decision was taken to enable citizens of the Turkish
Republic to attend the Sept. 6 game between the football teams of
Armenia and Turkey to be played in Yerevan," the article quoted a
government statement as saying.

Approached by Today’s Zaman yesterday, diplomatic sources in
Ankara said they haven’t yet received an official notification
concerning the visa decision; yet, the same sources also said such
an initiative by Yerevan should be considered normal procedure. "For
sporting events, the parties involved often provide such temporary
implementations. If this decision by Yerevan was actually made,
this is not an extraordinary action that hasn’t been seen before,"
the diplomatic sources, speaking under condition of anonymity, told
Today’s Zaman.

Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan invited President Abdullah Gul to a
World Cup qualifying match between the national soccer teams of the
two countries in Yerevan on Sept. 6, calling for dialogue to help
normalize ties and saying this would be mutually beneficial.

Both diplomats at the Foreign Ministry and officials close to the
Cankaya presidential palace are tight-lipped on whether Gul will
accept Sarksyan’s invitation, which has led the international media to
define the current state of affairs as "soccer diplomacy." Analysts
say Ankara will probably announce its decision on the matter at
the latest possible moment while continuing its silence as long as
possible. Sources close to Gul’s office say, however, that "Cankaya
palace’s assessment of the invitation is positive." Ankara Today’s
Zaman

Armenia Is Not Going To Get Out From The CIS

ARMENIA IS NOT GOING TO GET OUT FROM THE CIS

armradio.am
14.08.2008 16:10

Yesterday during the demonstration in Tbilisi the President of Georgia
Michail Sahakashvili announced that his country was going to get out
from the CIS. He appealed all the other members of cooperation to
do the same – to get out from the organization which is being ruled
by Russia.

Today vice Foreign Affairs Minister Gecham Charibjanyan announced
that in the external political agenda of RA Foreign Affairs Ministry
there is no question about gtting out from the CIS.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

The Transportation Of Armenian Citizens From Georgia To Armenia Is G

THE TRANSPORTATION OF ARMENIAN CITIZENS FROM GEORGIA TO ARMENIA IS GOING ON

armradio.am
14.08.2008 16:25

Yesterday other 1520 citizens of Armenia returned to their Motherland
from Georgia. 695 foreign citizens also entered Armenia. The citizens
of Armenia didn’t suffer during the last events in Georgia by the
state of August 13, 15:00 o’clock.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Tourist Information Center Opened In Dilijan Of Armenia

TOURIST INFORMATION CENTER OPENED IN DILIJAN OF ARMENIA

ARKA
Aug 14, 2008

YEREVAN, August 14. /ARKA/. A tourist information center has opened in
the territory of "Tufenkian" hotel complex in resort town of Dilijan.

The center will promote development of tourism in Tavush region of
Armenia and will provide tourists with information about events,
local sights, hotels and health resorts, said the Mayor of Dilijan
Armen Santrosyan at the opening ceremony. It is the first center
outside Yerevan, he said.

Armenian Minister of Economy Nerses Yeritsyan, in his turn, said that
the opening of the center is an example of successful cooperation
between the state and the private sector. He pointed out the growing
role of such information center for development of tourism all over
the world. These centers will ensure awareness and safety of tourists
in Armenia, the Minister said.

The center was opened under initiative of the Armenian Tourism
Development Agency supported by the Municipality of Dilijan and the
Competitive Armenian Private Sector program (CAPS/USAID).

Dilijan is one of the most popular Armenian resorts known for its
healing climate and picturesque nature. It is situated at 1,255-1,510
meters above the sea level, in the valley of Aghstev River valley in
the north-east of Armenia, 96 kilometers away from Yerevan. Population
of Dilijan is about 16,000 people.

Armenian President Expresses Condolences To Sahakashvili On Recent E

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT EXPRESSES CONDOLENCES TO SAHAKASHVILI ON RECENT EVENTS IN GEORGIA

ARKA
Aug 14, 2008

YEREVAN, August 15. /ARKA/. Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan expressed
condolences to his Georgian counterpart Mikhail Sahakashvili on many
victims in the recent events in Georgia and expressed readiness to
provide humanitarian aid to the country, the Press Service of Armenian
President reported.

"We wish the neighboring Georgia peace and prompt return to stability,
which is an important component of the regional stability," Sargsyan
said in his message.

Single-Pole World Ended From The Beginning Of The Battle Actions Aga

SINGLE-POLE WORLD ENDED FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE BATTLE ACTIONS AGAINST SOUTH OSSETIA, ARMENIAN POLITICAL EXPERT THINK

arminfo
2008-08-15 12:53:00

ArmInfo. Single-pole world ended from the beginning of the battle
actions against South Ossetia, Armenian political expert Levon
Melik-Shakhnazaryan told ArmInfo correspondent. ‘Thanks to interference
of Russia Tskhinvali has become the beginning of the second pole birth
in the world policy…The second pole, which is still being formed,
are – China, Russia, Iran, etc.

And Russia is still the leader of this pole’, – he said.

He thinks that in his aggressive actions Sahakashvili was supported
by the USA, since to start a war at the say of opening of the Olympic
Games is really an American but not Georgian way.

Anyway, Georgia had a hard humanitarian blow and international rating
of the republic fell, political expert said.

Mikheil Sahakashvili To Be Tried In Tbilisi But Not In Hague, Armeni

MIKHEIL SAHAKASHVILI TO BE TRIED IN TBILISI BUT NOT IN HAGUE, ARMENIAN POLITICAL EXPERT THINKS

arminfo
2008-08-15 12:19:00

Arminfo. Mikheil Sahakashvili should be tried in Tbilisi but not
in Hague, Armenian political expert Levon Melik-Shakhnazaryan told
ArmInfo correspondent. ‘Even if Georgian president finds himself in
Hague, he will be justified as the marionette court of Hague is for
such persons like Radovan Karadchich and Slobodan Miloshevich. Honest
people are tried there for the crimes which were not committed by
them’, – he said.

He also added that Sahakshvili should be tried by the Georgian people
in Tbilisi, as sooner or later Georgian people should understand that
he took Georgia in chaos.

‘I think that the people of Georgia will be wisdom enough to condemn
and punish the criminal president’, – Melik-Shaknazaryan concluded.