Azerbaijan: Baku Eyes Georgia Violence With Caution

AZERBAIJAN: BAKU EYES GEORGIA VIOLENCE WITH CAUTION
Shahin Abbasov

Institute for War and Peace Reporting
8/14/08
UK

EURASIA INSIGHT

Public sentiment in Azerbaijan is clearly on the side of neighboring
Georgia, but the Azerbaijani government is treading lightly, not
wanting to do or say anything that might provoke Russia. Baku,
which is intent on recovering its own separatist territory of
Nagorno-Karabakh, is concerned about how the fighting in Georgia
will impact the fates of Georgia’s break-away entities of Abkhazia
and South Ossetia. Azerbaijani leaders and energy executives are also
trying to play it safe concerning oil and natural gas pipelines that
cross Georgian territory.

With Russian troops and armor remaining in Georgia proper, the
signs are mounting that Abkhazia and South Ossetia will be formally
partitioned from Georgia, and perhaps even annexed by Russia. From
Baku’s perspective that would be a dire development. Khazar Ibrahim,
an Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokesperson, has spoken repeatedly in
favour of maintaining the status quo. "We support Georgia’s territorial
integrity and the restoration of the peace process," Ibrahim said at
a press briefing in Baku on August 11.

Beyond the territorial question, the Azerbaijani government has
refrained from commenting on the violence in Georgia, either about
Georgia’s actions in sending troops into the South Ossetian capital
of Tskhinvali, or the massive Russian response. Officials strike a
neutral tone, not going beyond statements of support for international
efforts to broker a ceasefire in Georgia.

Ibrahim also said that Baku had no intention of seeking a change to
the current structure of the OSCE Minsk Group, which is oversees
the Karabakh peace process. Russia is one of the Minsk Group
co-chairs. "Russia will stay as [a co-chair] of the Minsk Group,"
he said.

Opposition leaders in Baku, meanwhile, have been outspoken in their
condemnation of the Kremlin’s behavior. "Georgia is being punished
for its NATO aspirations and its democratic choice," said Sulhaddin
Akper, a leader of the Musavat Party. He urged swift action by the
United States and NATO to bolster Georgia.

Over the past few days, various public groups, youth organizations
and individuals have participated in rallies outside the Russian
Embassy in Baku in support of Georgians. Some attendees at a recent
rally carried placards with slogans such as "Stop Russian Aggression,"
and "Russia: Get Out of The Caucasus." Local media commentaries have
tended to be critical of the Russian military actions.

On a practical level, Azerbaijan has become a destination for
foreigners seeking to flee the fighting. Ibrahim, the Azerbaijani
diplomat, put the number of foreigners trying to cross the border in
the hundreds. "These people receive all possible support," he said.

The economic impact on Azerbaijan of the Russian incursion into Georgia
is a source of concern in Baku. Some officials privately worry that
recent developments in Georgia are troubling for Azerbaijan’s energy
independence.

Shipments of oil and natural gas via pipelines connecting Azerbaijan
to Turkey via Georgia have been suspended. A statement issued by
the energy giant BP said the pipelines have not been damaged, adding
that energy flows will remain suspended until the "the situation in
Georgia normalizes." Oil flows via the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline
stopped even before the outbreak of the Georgian-Russian conflict,
due to an explosion at a compressor station in Turkey. Azerbaijan’s
state energy entity, SOCAR, also announced that it has temporarily
halted oil deliveries to Georgia.

Production at oil and gas fields in Azerbaijan has been impacted
by the Georgia conflict, but state officials and energy consortium
representatives have not specified the current volume of production.

Tbilisi: Georgian Resorts Stripped Of Holidaymakers

GEORGIAN RESORTS STRIPPED OF HOLIDAYMAKERS
By M. Alkhazashvili

Messenger.ge
Thursday, August 14
Georgia

The summer tourist season in Georgia has been greatly affected by
the Russian aggression.

Most holidaymakers left urgently as soon as they heard news of air
strikes on Georgian territory. Most of these tourists were staying
at one of the Black Sea resorts in Adjara. The beginning of military
clashes in South Ossetia had little or no effect on numbers, but as
soon as Russia bombed the Adjara-Khelvachauri region panic spread
among holidaymakers and they fled.

Many Armenians on holiday in Adjara left speedily using back routes
through Akhaltsikhe. The many Russian tourists who were also visiting
Adjara returned home via Ukraine.

Does Nationalism Play Role In Georgia Conflict?

DOES NATIONALISM PLAY ROLE IN GEORGIA CONFLICT?
By Peter Fedynsky

Voice of America
14 August 2008
Moscow

The conflict in Georgia involves competing territorial,
economic, political and cultural claims of Georgians, Ossetians and
Russians. Underpinning those claims is ethnic identity, which is shaped
by language, history, culture and kinship. Taken to extremes, ethnicity
can turn into nationalism, which elevates the ethnic awareness and
interests of one group above all others. VOA Moscow Correspondent
Peter Fedynsky examines the role nationalism has played in the recent
violence in the Caucasus.

Russian soldier, left, talks to Georgian police officers on the
outskirts of Gori, northwest of Tbilisi, Georgia, 14 Aug 2008 Complex
migrations and demographic changes, through many centuries, put
Ossetians and Georgians on a collision course that has resulted in
varying degrees of friction between them, most recently the current
conflict in the Caucasus.

Language can be powerful motivating force

Ossetians and Georgians speak different languages. They do not even
have the same name for the territory that both seek to control. What
Ossetians refer to as South Ossetia, Georgian authorities prefer to
call the Tskhinvali region.

Alexander Rondelli, president of the Georgian Foundation for Strategic
and International Studies in Tbilisi, notes that language is a
powerful and often dangerous motivating force in many societies,
around the world.

"It’s a very strong feeling; very strong feeling, because it
mobilizes people. It’s vernacular mobilization, I would say," said
Rondelli. "It’s something which keeps people together. And, it’s
something for which people are really ready to be killed."

Accusations of ethnic cleansing

And, in Georgia they are being killed. Although casualty figures are
difficult to confirm, both sides are accusing each other of ethnic
cleansing. Human Rights Watch, an international non-governmental
organization, reports Ossetians have attacked Georgian villages. Russia
accuses Georgia of outright genocide against Ossetians, a small
ethnic group that straddles the border of northern Georgia and
southern Russia.

Hasan Dzutsev, professor of sociology at the North Ossetian Institute
of Humanitarian and Social Research in Vladikavkaz told VOA all
Ossetians seek reunification.

Quest for reunification

>From left, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, Abkhazia’s President
Sergei Bagapsh, and leader of South Ossetia’s rebel government,
Eduard Kokoity in Moscow, 14 Aug 2008 Dzutsev says reunification is
an age-old dream, noting that until 1922, Ossetians lived together on
one territory, but in Stalin’s time, they were artificially divided
when Southern Ossetia was transferred to Georgia and the North was
given to Russia.

Alexander Rondelli says Northern and Southern Ossetia were two of
many autonomies created across borders of former Soviet Republics,
with the intention of fomenting ethnic tensions in a classic divide
and conquer tactic. Today, Russian troops claim a peacekeeping role
in South Ossetia. Georgians call them invaders and fear the Kremlin
is seeking to destroy their fragile democracy.

Russian interest in Ossetia

In Moscow, independent Russian political analyst Alexander Konovalov
says huge industrial projects during the communist era changed the
ethnic composition of Soviet republics, as large numbers of Russian
speakers were sent to construct, for example, a nuclear power plant
in Lithuania or a cotton mill in Central Asia. Konovalov says this
created an ethnic time bomb, which exploded after the collapse of the
Soviet Union, as various peoples of the USSR sought to reclaim their
languages and ethnic identities. Konovalov notes that many Russians,
himself included, do not feel a need to affirm their ethnic identity.

The analyst says there were many Russians in the Soviet Union and that,
as a rule, large ethnic groups tend to ignore the identity of other
peoples and do not overly concern themselves about their own. He says
there is no need for affirmation, because it is clear that Russians
are Russians.

Russian tanks on the outskirts of Gori, northwest of capital Tbilisi,
Georgia, 14 Aug 2008 However, smaller ethnicities are sensitive to
the possibility of subjugation and even extinction. There are about
500,000 Ossetians; roughly 70,000 of them in Georgia. Hasan Dzutsev
says South Ossetians fear complete annihilation by Georgians –
a charge Tbilisi says is without basis.

What is driving conflict?

Alexander Konovalov says the conflict in Georgia involves two
fundamental but competing principles of international relations,
which he says poses a threat to global security.

Konovalov says the first principle is the inviolability of
international borders established by the United Nations and the Final
Act of the 1975 Helsinki Agreement. He says there is also the principle
of self-determination of peoples enunciated by U.S. President Woodrow
Wilson’s "14 Points" in 1918. Konovalov says, without exception,
one side or the other of every ethnic conflict cites one or the
other principle.

The analyst says international law has not established which of these
principles should take precedence. Thus, the need one ethnic group
has for independent territory to allow its language and culture to
bear political and economic fruit collides with another group which
needs that same territory to protect its vital interests.

Each analyst interviewed for this report cited examples of multi-ethnic
societies that work, such as Switzerland and Canada. The Caucasus
is a place where ethnic animosities have exploded in bloodshed. In
recent times, Chechens fought Russians, Ingushetians struggled against
Ossetians, Armenians battled Azeris and the Abkhazians competed with
Georgians. The war that has erupted between Ossetians and Georgians
is an ethnic struggle that has global implications for oil, democracy
and political influence in the post-Soviet world.

CIS Without Georgia: Is It Good Or Bad?

CIS WITHOUT GEORGIA: IS IT GOOD OR BAD?

RIA Novosti
21:14 | 14/ 08/ 2008
Russia

MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti correspondent Valentin Rakhmanov) – Georgian
President Mikheil Saakashvili has publicly declared that his country
is withdrawing from the CIS. Other members of the Commonwealth have
reacted to the news with half surprise and half indifference. There
was little official reaction.

The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry flatly refused to comment on
Saakashvili’s announcement prior to Georgia filing the official
documents with the CIS Executive Committee. Kyrgyzstan’s political
leaders said their country continues to support the Commonwealth
future. Belarus said it was "a supporter of the CIS". The Foreign
Ministry of Azerbaijan remarked that "Georgia’s withdrawal from the
CIS is Tbilisi’s own business". The Russian Foreign Ministry implied
that Saakashvili’s move would be detrimental to the people of Georgia.

So, the former Soviet Union countries have failed to express solidarity
with Saakashvili over his "Rose Republic’s" withdrawal from the
CIS. However, glib diplomatic formulas do not contain any trace of
outrage over his actions. What can one make of this reaction? Will
Tbilisi’s withdrawal make a difference to the organization? And if so,
in what way?

These questions have provoked arguments among analysts.

Alexei Vlasov, the director of the Information-Analytical Center for
the Study of the Social and Political Processes in the Post-Soviet
Space, suggested that Georgia’s withdrawal from the CIS was good news
for the CIS. "In the past two years the CIS has been an all-purpose
negotiating forum where Vladimir Putin and Mikheil Saakashvili,
the Armenian and Azerbaijani Presidents could meet and talk," he
elaborates. "But at the moment it is no more than a special interest
club which, in spite of attempted reforms – by the Presidents of
Kazakhstan and Russia – remains just that. Therefore nothing real and
practical has been happening within the CIS," Vlasov said. The problem
now, as in the past, is that each member of the Commonwealth adheres
to its own interests. With the withdrawal of Georgia, the number of
countries that have been playing a zero-sum game with Moscow has
diminished. Consequently, there is a chance to reform the CIS and
make it more practical and active.

Mr Vlasov added that Tbilisi’s withdrawal may perhaps bring home to
the Russian elite that Russia needs the CIS countries and its fate
depends on it. That would have a positive impact on the fate of the
Commonwealth. The analyst believes that Georgia’s move leaves the CIS
with fewer countries which consider the Commonwealth of Independent
States to be "an adjunct to Russian globalism".

Leonid Vardomsky, the head of the CIS and Baltic Center, has a
different opinion. He believes Georgia’s withdrawal and the recent
peace-keeping operations will slow down CIS reform.

"The fact of Georgia’s withdrawal from the CIS is not all that
important. Of late Tbilisi has hardly signed anything within the
Commonwealth and has used it solely as a negotiating forum. But this
provocative step attracts the attention of the CIS elites to Russia’s
use of force against Georgia. The CIS elites are beginning to project
this situation onto themselves and feel mistrust toward Moscow. This
is especially true of Azerbaijan which has the Nagorny Karabakh problem
on its hands", Mr Vardomsky said. New projects within the CIS will most
probably be put on hold until the Georgia-provoked mistrust wears off.

Both analysts agree that in the current situation no other CIS
country is likely to follow Georgia’s example. Leonid Vardomsky notes
with reason that Georgia stands to lose very little from pulling
out of the organization, considering the recent economic blockade
by Russia. However, Russian imports into that country at present
stand at the same level as before Saakashvili came to power. There
is also a visa regimen between Russia and Georgia. Other countries,
thanks to the CIS, enjoy visa-free travel for their citizens and have
considerable economic advantages. They will not easily part with an
organization that they find useful.

The reaction of the CIS countries since the beginning of the
Russia-Georgia – South Ossetia conflict has been unclear; in fact
there has been no reaction. This can be attributed to a thousand
reasons, including fear of Russia’s military actions or just plain
bewilderment. Perhaps Tbilisi’s sudden withdrawal from the Commonwealth
caught the former Soviet Republics by surprise. They simply do not
know how to react and are therefore keeping a reticent neutrality. Be
that as it may, no one has expressed any solidarity with Georgia in
connection with its move.

The opinions expressed in this article are the author’s and do not
necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.

U.S. Role In Georgia Crisis

U.S. ROLE IN GEORGIA CRISIS
Stephen Zunes

Foreign Policy In Focus

August 14, 2008

The international condemnation of Russian aggression against Georgia
– and the concomitant assaults by Abkhazians and South Ossetians
against ethnic Georgians within their territories – is in large part
appropriate. But the self-righteous posturing coming out of Washington
should be tempered by a sober recognition of the ways in which the
United States has contributed to the crisis.

It has been nearly impossible to even broach this subject of the
U.S. role. Much of the mainstream media coverage and statements
by American political leaders of both major parties has in many
respects resembled the anti-Russian hysterics of the Cold War. It
is striking how quickly forgotten is the fact that the U.S.-backed
Georgian military started the war when it brutally assaulted the South
Ossetian capital of Tskhinvali in an attempt to regain direct control
of the autonomous region. This attack prompted the disproportionate
and illegitimate Russian military response, which soon went beyond
simply ousting invading Georgian forces from South Ossetia to invading
and occupying large segments of Georgia itself.

The South Ossetians themselves did much to provoke Georgia as
well by shelling villages populated by ethnic Georgians earlier
this month. However, Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili ruled
out signing a non-aggression pact and repeatedly refused to rejoin
talks of the Joint Control Commission to prevent an escalation of
the violence. Furthermore, according to Reuters, a draft UN Security
Council statement calling for an immediate cease fire was blocked
when the United States objected to "a phrase in the three-sentence
draft statement that would have required both sides ‘to renounce the
use of force.’"

Borders and Boundaries In the Caucuses and Central Asia, the
Russian empire and its Soviet successors, like the Western European
colonialists in Africa, often drew state boundaries arbitrarily
and, in some cases, not so arbitrarily as part of a divide-and-rule
strategy. The small and ethnically distinct regions of South Ossetia,
Abkhazia, and Ajaria were incorporated into the Georgian Soviet
Socialist Republic and – on the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991 –
remained as autonomous regions within the state of Georgia. Not one
of the regions was ethnically pure. They all included sizable ethnic
Georgian minorities, among others. Despite cultural and linguistic
differences, there was not much in the way of ethnic tension during
most of the Soviet period and inter-marriage was not uncommon.

As the USSR fell apart in the late 1980s, however, nationalist
sentiments increased dramatically throughout the Caucuses region
in such ethnic enclaves as Chechnya in Russia, Nagorno-Karabakh in
Azerbaijan, as well as among those within Georgia. Compounding these
nationalist and ethnic tensions was the rise of the ultra-nationalist
Georgian president Zviad Gamsakhurdia, who assumed power when the
country declared independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. With the
possible exception of the Baltic states, Georgia had maintained the
strongest sense of nationalism of any of the former Soviet republics,
tracing its national identity as far back as the 4th century BC as
one of most advanced states of its time. This resurgent nationalism
led the newly re-emerged independent Georgia to attempt to assert
its sovereignty over its autonomous regions by force.

A series of civil conflicts raged in Georgia in subsequent years,
both between competing political factions within Georgia itself as
well as in South Ossetia and Abkhazia, resulting in widespread ethnic
cleansing. Backed by Russian forces, these two regions achieved de
facto independence while, within Georgia proper, former Soviet foreign
minister Eduard Shevardnadze emerged as president and brought some
semblance of stability to the country, despite a weak economy and
widespread corruption.

Russian troops, nominally in a peacekeeping role but clearly aligned
with nationalist elements within the two ethnic enclaves, effectively
prevented any subsequent exercise of Georgian government authority
over most of these territories. Meanwhile, the United States became
the biggest foreign backer of the Shevardnadze regime, pouring
in over $1 billion in aid during the decade of his corrupt and
semi-authoritarian rule.

The Rose Revolution Though strongly supported by Washington,
Shevardnadze was less well-respected at home. For example, The New
York Times reported how "Georgians have a different perspective"
than the generous pro-government view from Washington, citing the
observation in the Georgian daily newspaper The Messenger that,
"Despite the fact that he is adored in the West as an ‘architect of
democracy’ and credited with ending the Cold War, Georgians cannot
bear their president." Though critical of the rampant corruption
and rigged elections, the Bush administration stood by the Georgian
regime, as they had the post-Communist dictatorships in Azerbaijan,
Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and most of the other former Soviet republics.

Georgia enjoyed relatively more political freedom and civil society
institutions than most other post-Soviet states. Nevertheless,
high unemployment, a breakdown in the allocation of energy for
heating and other needs, a deteriorating infrastructure, widespread
corruption, and inept governance led to growing dissatisfaction with
the government. By 2003, Shevardnadze had lost support from virtually
every social class, ethnic group, and geographical region of the
country. Heavy losses by his supporters in parliamentary elections
early that November were widely anticipated. Still, Shevardnadze
continued to receive the strong support of President George W. Bush due
to his close personal relationship with high-ranking administration
officials. Contributing to this relationship were his pro-Western
policies, such as embarking upon ambitious free market reforms under
the tutelage of the International Monetary Fund, agreeing to deploy
300 Georgian troops to Iraq following the U.S. invasion, and sending
Georgian troops trained by U.S. Special Forces to the Pankisi Gorge
on the border of Chechnya to fight Chechen rebels. Opposition leaders
Zurab Zhvania and Mikheil Saakashvilli strongly criticized the United
States for its continued support of the Georgian president.

In addition to the electoral opposition, a decentralized student-led
grass roots movement known as Kmara emerged, calling for an end to
corruption and more democratic and accountable government as well as
free and fair elections. Though not directly supported by the Bush
administration, a number of Western NGOs, including the Open Society
Institute (backed by Hungarian-American financier George Soros)
and the National Democratic Institute (supported, ironically, by
U.S. congressional funding) provided funding for election-monitoring
and helped facilitate workshops for both the young Kmara activists
and mainstream opposition leaders. This led to some serious tension
between these non-governmental organizations and the U.S. embassy in
Georgian capital. For example, when the U.S. ambassador to Georgia
learned that some leaders from the successful student-led nonviolent
civil insurrection in Serbia three years earlier were in Tbilisi to
give trainings to Kmara activists there, he told them to "Get out of
Georgia! We don’t want trouble here. Shevardnadze is our friend." (The
young Serbs ignored him, and the scheduled trainings in strategic
nonviolent action went forward anyway.)

The parliamentary elections that November were marred by a series of
irregularities. These included widespread ballot-stuffing, multiple
voting by government supporters, late poll openings, missing ballots,
and missing voter lists in opposition strongholds. These attempts to
steal the election elicited little more than finger-wagging from the
Bush administration.

The Georgians themselves did not take the situation so lightly,
however. They launched general strikes and massive street protests
against what they saw as illegitimate government authority. This
effort was soon dubbed the "Rose Revolution." Gaining support from
the United States only after the success of the nonviolent civil
insurrection appeared inevitable, this popular uprising forced
Shevardnadze to resign.

Presidential elections, certified as free and fair by international
observers, were held two months later, in which opposition leader
Mikheil Saakashvili emerged victorious. Four months later, the
authoritarian ruler of the autonomous region of Ajaria, a Shevardnadze
ally, was ousted in a similar nonviolent civil insurrection.

Though not responsible for the change of government itself, the Bush
administration soon moved to take advantage of the change the Georgian
people brought about after the fact.

U.S. Embrace of Saakashvili Despite its longstanding support for
Shevardnadze, the Bush administration quickly embraced Georgia’s new
president. Taking advantage of Georgia’s desperate economic situation,
the United States successfully lobbied for a series of additional free
market reforms and other neoliberal economic measures on the country,
including a flat tax of 14%. Though official corruption declined, tax
collection rates improved, and the rate of economic growth increased,
high unemployment remained and social inequality grew.

With strong encouragement from Washington, Saakashvili’s government
reduced domestic spending but dramatically increased military spending,
with the armed forces expanding to more than 45,000 personnel over
the next four years, more than 12,000 of whom were trained by the
United States. Congress approved hundreds of millions of dollars of
military assistance to Georgia, a small country of less than five
million people. In addition, the United States successfully encouraged
Israel to send advisors and trainers to support the rapidly-expanding
Georgian armed forces.

Although facing growing security concerns at home, the Bush
administration also successfully pushed Saakashvili to send an
additional 1,700 troops to Iraq. Thus, Georgia increased its troop
strength in Iraq by more than 500% even as other countries in the
U.S.-led multinational force were pulling out.

Though Georgia is located in a region well within Russia’s historic
sphere of influence and is more than 3,000 miles from the Atlantic
Ocean, Bush nevertheless launched an ambitious campaign to bring
Georgia into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). The
Russians, who had already seen previous U.S. assurances to Gorbachev
that NATO would not extend eastward ignored, found the prospects of
NATO expansion to the strategically important and volatile Caucasus
region particularly provocative. This inflamed Russian nationalists
and Russian military leaders and no doubt strengthened their resolve
to maintain their military presence in South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Washington’s embrace of Saakashvili, like its earlier embrace of
Shevardnadze, appears to have been based in large part on oil. The
United States has helped establish Georgia as a major energy transit
corridor, building an oil pipeline from the Caspian region known as
the BTC (Baku-Tbilisi-Ceylan) and a parallel natural gas pipeline,
both designed to avoid the more logical geographical routes through
Russia or Iran. The Russians, meanwhile, in an effort to maintain as
much control over the westbound oil from the region, have responded by
pressuring the governments of Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan
to sign exclusive export agreements and to construct natural gas
pipelines through Russia. (See Michael Klare’s Russia and Georgia:
All About Oil.)

Amid accusations of widespread corruption and not adequately addressing
the country’s growing poverty, Saakashvili himself faced widespread
protests in November 2007, to which he responded with severe
repression, shutting down independent media, detaining opposition
leaders, and sending his security forces to assault largely nonviolent
demonstrators with tear gas, truncheons, rubber bullets, water cannons,
and sonic equipment. Human Rights Watch criticized the government for
using "excessive" force against protesters and the International Crisis
Group warned of growing authoritarianism in the country. Despite this,
Saakashvili continued to receive strong support from Washington and
still appeared to have majority support within Georgia, winning a
snap election in January by a solid majority which – despite some
irregularities – was generally thought to be free and fair.

Lead-up to the Current Crisis A number of misguided U.S. policies
appear to have played an important role in encouraging Georgia to
launch its August 6 assault on South Ossetia.

The first had to do with the U.S.-led militarization of Georgia, which
likely emboldened Saakashvili to try to resolve the conflict over South
Ossetia by military means. Just last month, the United States held
a military exercise in Georgia with more than 1,000 American troops
while the Bush administration, according to The New York Times, was
"loudly proclaiming its support for Georgia’s territorial integrity
in the battle with Russia over Georgia’s separatist enclaves." As
the situation was deteriorating last month, U.S. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice made a high-profile visit to Saakashvili in Tbilisi,
where she reiterated the strong strategic relationship between the
two countries.

Radio Liberty speculates that Saakashvili "may have felt that
his military, after several years of U.S.-sponsored training and
rearmament, was now capable of routing the Ossetian separatists
("bandits," in the official parlance) and neutralizing the Russian
peacekeepers." Furthermore, Saakashvili apparently hoped that
the anticipated Russian reaction would "immediately transform the
conflict into a direct confrontation between a democratic David and
an autocratic Goliath, making sure the sympathy of the Western world
would be mobilized for Georgia."

According to Charles Kupchan of the Council on Foreign Relations,
the United States may have caused Saakashvili to "miscalculate" and
"overreach" by making him feel that "at the end of the day that the
West would come to his assistance if he got into trouble."

Another factor undoubtedly involved the U.S. push for Georgia to
join NATO. The efforts by some prominent Kremlin lawmakers for formal
recognition of South Ossetia and Abkhazia coincided with the escalated
efforts for NATO’s inclusion of Georgia this spring, as well as an
awareness that any potential Russian military move against Georgia
would need to come sooner rather than later.

And, as a number of us predicted last March, Western support for the
unilateral declaration of independence by the autonomous Serbian
region of Kosovo emboldened nationalist leaders in the autonomous
Georgian regions, along with their Russian supporters, to press for
the independence of these nations as well. Despite the pro-American
sympathies of many in that country, Georgians were notably alarmed
by the quick and precedent-setting U.S. recognition of Kosovo.

No Standing to Challenge Russian Aggression Russia’s massive and
brutal military counter-offensive, while immediately provoked by
Georgia’s attack on South Ossetia, had clearly been planned well in
advance. It also went well beyond defending the enclave to illegally
sending forces deep into Georgia itself and inflicting widespread
civilian casualties. It has had nothing to do with solidarity with an
oppressed people struggling for self-determination and everything to do
with geopolitics and the assertion of militaristic Russian nationalism.

While the international community has solid grounds to challenge
Russian aggression, however, the United States has lost virtually
all moral standing to take a principled stance.

For example, the brutally punitive and disproportionate response by
the Russian armed forces pales in comparison to that of Israel’s
2006 attacks on Lebanon, which were strongly defended not only by
the Bush administration, but leading Democrats in Congress, including
presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama.

Russia’s use of large-scale militarily force to defend the autonomy of
South Ossetia by massively attacking Georgia has been significantly
less destructive than the U.S.-led NATO assault on Serbia to defend
Kosovo’s autonomy in 1999, an action that received broad bipartisan
American support.

And the Russian ground invasion of Georgia, while a clear violation
of international legal norms, is far less significant a breach of
international law as the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, authorized
by a large majority in Congress.

This doesn’t mean that the Russia’s military offensive should not be
rigorously opposed. However, the U.S. contribution to this unfolding
tragedy and the absence of any moral authority to challenge it must
not be ignored.

Stephen Zunes is a senior analyst for Foreign Policy in Focus and
serves as a professor of politics and international studies at the
University of San Francisco.

www.fpif.org

A New Precedent Set

A NEW PRECEDENT SET

Russia Profile
August 14, 2008
Russia

The South Ossetian War Turns a New Page in post-Soviet History

In the wake of the compelling events in the South Ossetian War,
advocates of both sides of the conflict have been eager to label each
other with accusations largely based on well-worn truisms. Such a
heated display of political convictions requires a revised observation
of the Caucasus question, by taking into account the circumstances in
the Caucasus’ recent historical past. What emerges is the understanding
that the August conflict has created a new standard in post-Soviet
hostilities, where old saws have lost their value.

The tragic events of August 2008 in South Ossetia have once again
agitated the already restless regions of the Caucasus. But this
time, it’s not just another disturbance of the status quo–even up
until this August, the ethno-political situation in the Southern
Caucasus was far from peaceful and stable. Beginning in 2004,
attempts to resume military action have been made in South Ossetia,
while for four years, skirmishes and artillery fire have become a
part of everyday reality. Having brought military equipment into
the upper part of the Kodori Gorge in 2006, Georgia thus in many
respects provoked the current escalation of the conflict in this
"hot spot." Yet in the history of Eurasian conflicts, August of 2008
has become a turning point.

>From this time onwards, the old rules of the game, formulated following
the disintegration of the Soviet Union, no longer apply in the Caucasus
(and who knows, possibly in the Black Sea region or even in the CIS
as a whole). To use computer programming jargon, we can say that in
August, 2008, a total "reboot" of the conflicts on Eurasian territory
took place. An extremely significant precedent has been created,
where legal and political agreements that have ensured stability and
the status quo are no longer valid. Georgia ceases to adhere to them,
after fully refusing to implement the Dagomys and Moscow treaties on
Abkhazia and Southern Russia respectively. But neither does Russia,
whose leadership has broadened its understanding of the peacekeeping
operation.

In 2008, the conflicts in the CIS have reached a qualitatively
new level. If, at the beginning of the 1990s, they were spurred
directly by the disintegration of the Soviet Union, then today they
are no longer defined by the inertia of the past, but by the current
dynamics of formation and development of new nation-states. If the
conflicts of the beginning of the 1990s were delayed payments on
the "Evil Empire’s" accounts, then the conflicts of today are an
introduction of new payment requirements. There are no longer any
"frozen conflicts"–they are an anachronism of the 1990s, that
has departed along with Boris Yeltsin’s "generation." Contemporary
conflicts are planned and resolved by the post-Soviet generation of
politicians. But this generation makes up new rules for the game as
it goes along. What arrangement we will have in the end we shall see
in the near future.

Today, it has become fashionable in the Russian mass media to
see a "Western hand" in everything. Let’s leave this task to the
propagandists. Meanwhile, it is evident that this concept largely
relieves the Georgian establishment (what has it got to do with
anything while it is the West which is at fault? Mikheil Saakashvili
is just a puppet), as well as the Georgian society (as always,
people aren’t responsible for the actions of the politicians)
of responsibility. Such an approach distances us from making a key
diagnosis of the epidemic – small nationalism, no less (if not more)
dangerous than large nationalism. Georgian society as a whole bears
direct responsibility for the tragedy in Tskhinvali. It was the society
(in the face of its outstanding intellectuals and public activists)
that shaped the demand for a person like Saakashvili. I don’t mean the
specific politician and individual Mikheil Nikolaevich Saakashvili,
born in 1967. I speak of the type of "statist" who is willing to
make any kind of sacrifice for a strong Georgia (understood as
an antipode to Eduard Shevarnadze’s Georgia and as "territorially
wholesome"). While debate in Russia still continues to touch upon the
"cost" of having incorporated Chechnya, in Georgia state leaders are
being criticized for anything that goes (corruption, authoritarianism,
lack of professionalism) but not for the wars in South Ossetia and
Abkhazia.

Let us recall that at the beginning of the 1990s, the Georgian people
(with no help from the Americans and the British) willingly gave
their votes to a person who spoke of Ossetians as "trash that needs
to be swept through the Roki Tunnel). This person, Zvias Gamsahurdia,
has been politically rehabilitated by the current president, who
in August of 2008 went from words to action. Back in 1991, Georgian
intellectuals in their masses did not support the sentiment of their
great fellow countryman Merab Mamardashvili, who said that "if my
people elect Gamsahurdia, I will be against my people." Sadly, since
then, nobody in Georgia chose Mamardashvili’s path.

The role of the West is too oblique in this situation. Firstly,
the United States to a greater degree and the EU to a lesser degree
could not overcome their own propagandist labels. Among them is the
perception of the break-up of the Soviet Union solely as a victory
of democracy, the identification of anti-communist nationalism
(even in its most extreme states) with a movement for freedom,
and an acceptance of the fact that small nationalism, compared with
Russian imperialism and a possible rebirth of the Soviet Union, is
the lesser of two evils. This is the second lesson of the Ossetian
tragedy. For the sake of countering "the imperial onslaught," both
Ossetians and Abkhazians have been sacrificed (nobody wants to hear
them, they don’t fit within the framework of a struggle between a
"small democratic republic" and a "large aggressor"). Meanwhile,
far from everything that worked against the Soviet Union had to do
with freedom and democracy.

The August tragedy has been a failed attempt to repeat the Serbian
Krajina precedent. This time there is an experience of a successful
military-political revenge in the Balkans. While in Russia (and in
the CIS in general), where only the laziest did not write about the
"Kosovo casus," there was little talk of copying Croatia’s experience
of destroying the infrastructure of the unrecognized state of the
Republic of Serbian Krajina. Let us remember that at the beginning of
the 1990s, Croatia had initially lost a large part of its territory,
but then in 1995, with support from the United States and Germany,
restored the entirety of its state within the borders of the socialist
republic of Tito’s Yugoslavia. Meanwhile, this scenario was widely
discussed in Tbilisi and in Baku. And it wasn’t just discussed as a
theoretical problem. Beginning in 2004, military action of a different
level of intensity was carried out in South Ossetia.

"The Krajina example can become a more influential model than
Kosovo…There may come a time when the political elites of Baku
and Tbilisi will consider a successful and speedy war to reintegrate
Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and Nagorny-Karabakh will get the green light
on behalf of the United States, which made the Croatian offensive
against Krajina easier." This was written in an American magazine in
May of this year by Charles King, an authoritative American scientist
from Georgetown University. However, King also no less justly noted
that the "Krajina precedent" can be successful only in the form of
blitzkrieg warfare. "Georgian and Azerbaijani forces are likely to
win within the first weeks of such a war, but they are most likely
to lose when the weeks that follow arrive." Russia interrupted
Georgia’s "Krajina flight" in just days, not weeks. Tbilisi begun
destroying the infrastructure of the de facto state (accompanied by
an expulsion of an unnecessary ethnic element), but did not conclude
what "democratic Croatia" did by cleansing its territory of Serbs,
thus fully resolving the issue of ethnic separatism. Accordingly,
it should not be ruled out that the number of "Krajina precedent"
followers in Eurasia has significantly shrunk.

For the first time in many years Russia has taken military action
beyond the borders of its own territory. Following the break-up of
the Soviet Union, Russian servicemen and border guards took part in
localizing two civil wars in Tadzhikistan (1992-1997) and in Georgia
(1993). But after that, the Russian army only participated in military
action within its own territory. In 2008 the format of the Russian
army’s involvement beyond the country’s borders was drastically
different from the historical experience of both the tsarist and the
Soviet periods. Russian troops did not try to resolve ideological
problems (as was the case with suppressing the Hungarian uprising of
1894, or during the events in Budapest in 1956 or in Czechoslovakia
in 1968). The goal of the Russian forces was not to increase its
territory, although with this Tbilisi has been the most consistent in
denouncing Moscow. The goal of the "peace enforcement" operation was
primarily to ensure the security of the Northern Caucasus. If Russia
had remained quiet in the South Ossetian case, different forces would
emerge in the Northern Caucasus willing to replay the conflict in the
Prigorodny district (the Georgian-Ossetian and the Ossetian-Ingush
conflicts are closely tied to each other). The inability of the
Kremlin to articulate this national interest (for fear of Russia
being seen as a weak and vulnerable nation) is a different issue. In
any case, Russia has defined its particular role in the "near abroad"
(similar to the role of the United States in Latin America, Israel’s
in the Middle East, Australia’s in Oceania and France’s in the former
colonies of Sub-Saharan Africa). This is a qualitatively new definition
of one’s vital and legitimate interests.

Those who expected Georgia (or any other CIS country) to become the
starting point of a new "Cold War" between the West and Russia were let
down. Within the West itself (those in political, expert analysis and
media circles) there was disagreement on approaching this particular
conflict and on the "cost" of aggravating relations with Moscow. In
this regard, the reaction of some officious journalists and experts
regarding the West’s "inadequate response" is perplexing. So what is
it that we actually wanted? The president of the United States to
personally acknowledge his previous life as a tragic mistake? When
comparing the U.S. and the EU’s reaction to Russia’s actions in
South Ossetia with the attitude toward Russian policy in Chechnya,
one must admit that there was much less criticism.

For the sake of being objective, it should note that the level of state
propaganda was much higher. There were no disgraceful persecutions
of Georgians as in 2006 (conversely, the minister of the interior was
ordered to prevent any excesses of this kind); there have been attempts
made to differentiate the Georgian people from the Georgian regime. And
most importantly, the "peace enforcement" operation was performed as a
"humanitarian intervention." Russia has begun speaking a language that
the West can understand. In a rare occurrence, protecting human rights
was at the head of a military-political operation, not the defense of
communism or of a monarch, but the defense of our soldiers, fellow
countrymen, and the rights of an ethnic minority. Of course, there
were a lot of failures here (the information supply to the Western mass
media and human rights groups regarding the situation in South Ossetia
was poor). But the overall propagandist trend was on the right track.

Today, Russia has three main problems. The first one is not allowing
the involvement of new players in the conflict, especially within
the CIS. Ukraine’s stance also creates lots of problems not just for
itself. The second problem is winning the informational war. Today,
Russia has accumulated plenty of material that demonstrates all the
dangers of "small nationalism" in retrospective (beginning in the
1990s). This material can be used in the struggle for the minds of
intellectuals and human rights advocates in the West. This resource
should not be underestimated. And finally, the third problem is
the search for a dignified way out of the situation–a departure
maximally beneficial for Russia’s national interests (among which,
ensuring security in the Northern Caucasus is a priority). Hopes
for a regime change are unlikely to be realized. Those who have seen
the Georgian opposition in action can not hope for their increased
tolerance toward Abkhazia and South Ossetia. And thus, new rules of
the game have to be created today, in order to stop the qualitatively
new turn of destabilization. Following the "Tskhinvali blitzkrieg,"
the chances of Georgia achieving territorial integrity are practically
impossible. Neither can the status quo be re-established, because
following the Georgian military’s action and the Russian military
operation it will still be a different status. Not a good nor bad one,
but different.

WIB Hosts "Free Gaza" Event

WIB HOSTS "FREE GAZA" EVENT

Washington Report on Middle East Affairs
August 14, 2008
DC

Post-Free Gaza fund-raiser celebrants (l-r) Lucy DerTawitan, comedienne
Maysoon Zaid, Greta Berlin, Mary Hughes Thomas and Irena Varjabedian
(S. Twair photo).

IT WAS BILLED as "Culture as Resistance: A Night of Hip Hop, Activism
and the Spoken Word"–and as one spectator commented at the June 7
fund-raiser for the Free Gaza Mission, "It’s like being back in the
’60s without the cigarette smoke."

More than 115 Armenians, Latinos and curious Anglos turned up at the
Side Bar in Glendale, CA to learn more about the boat trip planned
in August by unarmed civilians to break the Israeli-imposed blockade
of Gaza, which even prevents Palestinian fishermen from fishing in
their waters.

Stirring Hip Hop lyrics were presented by Omar Chakaki, an architect
and founding member of the N.O.M.A.D.S., and Nizar Wattad, a
screenwriter and producer of "Free the P." An emotional performance
was offered by poet Mark Gonzalez, who has traveled to refugee camps
in Palestine and the streets of Havana.

Adding to the world class entertainment was a surprise performance
by Palestinian American comedienne Maysoon Zaid, who volunteered her
hilarious stand-up comedy when she learned about the event.

Prof. Yigal Arens, who was born in Israel and is director of USC’s
Information Science Institute, discussed the injustices Palestinians
live in under Israeli military occupation. Many questioned Dr. Arens
about Israel’s reasoning behind starving and depriving Gazans of
basic human rights.

Women In Black activist Greta Berlin discussed why Americans and
Europeans are willing to pay money to risk their lives on the proposed
August boat trip to bring food and medical supplies to the people
of Gaza. Afterwards, concerned listeners asked Berlin to come to the
Rotary Club and other civic organizations and discuss the plight of
the Palestinian people.

Kyrgyz Deputies Leave For Tskhinvali

KYRGYZ DEPUTIES LEAVE FOR TSKHINVALI
by Elena Skochilo

Neweurasia.net
August 14th, 2008
Europe

Delegation of Kyrgyz Parliament members leaves for Tskhinvali, South
Ossetia, to offer peacekeeping negotiation services in settling
conflict with Georgia, reports news agency 24.kg.

The delegation, consisting of three members of parliament and a
conflict expert will depart to the Russian city of Vladikavkaz tonight
from where the negotiants head for Tskhinvali. The Kyrgyz intend
to meet with the leadership of the breakaway republic. After that
the delegation will visit Georgia and hold talks with the President
Mikheil Saakashvili.

Plans of Kyrgyzstan stand for active assistance in settling the
Georgian-Ossetian conflict.

Kyrgyzstan has a peacekeeping experience in the past. Meder
Sherimkulov, for instance, a former speaker of parliament headed a
peacekeeping mission in Nagorny-Karabakh. Felix Kulov former vice
president took part in settling the conflict in Tajikistan.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Ossetie Du Sud-Abkhazie: Le Kazakhstan Et Le Kirghizstan Saluent L’A

OSSETIE DU SUD-ABKHAZIE: LE KAZAKHSTAN ET LE KIRGHIZSTAN SALUENT L’ARRET DES HOSTILITES

RIA Novosti
16:15 | 14/ 08/ 2008
Russia

International

ASTANA, 14 aout – RIA Novosti. Les presidents kazakh et kirghiz,
Noursoultan Nazarbaïev et Kourmanbek Bakiev, ont salue mercredi l’arret
des hostilites dans la zone des conflits abkhazo- et osseto-georgiens
lors d’une rencontre a Tcholpon-Ata (Kirghizstan), a annonce jeudi
le site internet du president kazakh.

"Le principe de l’integrite territoriale est universellement reconnu
par la communaute internationale. Les documents que nous avons adoptes
dans le cadre de la Communaute des Etats Independants (CEI) condamnent
le separatisme. Il faut regler les conflits interethniques par la voie
negociee. Ces problèmes n’ont pas de solutions militaires. Nous saluons
la declaration des presidents russe et georgien sur le cessez-le-feu
et le debut des negociations. Nous esperons que les negociations seront
un succès et permettront d’eviter une effusion de sang dans l’avenir",
a declare M.Nazarbaïev sur son site.

"Nous avons vu a la television que la ville de Tskhinvali (capitale de
la republique autoproclamee d’Ossetie du Sud) etait rasee. C’est une
veritable catastrophe humanitaire pour les civils. M.Bakiev et moi,
nous exprimons nos condoleances aux familles des victimes. Et nous
sommes sincèrement decus par ces evenements", a indique M.Nazarbaïev.

Le president kazakh a charge le gouvernement d’envoyer une aide
humanitaire dans la zone du conflit en Georgie.

Les deux presidents ont estime que la CEI devait prendre des mesures
conjointes pour stabiliser la situation dans la zone du conflit
pour eviter une crise au sein de la Communaute. "Malheureusement,
les efforts de certains membres de la CEI ont rendu notre Communaute
amorphe, nous n’avons pas de mecanismes d’ingerence dans ces conflits",
a note M.Nazarbaïev. Les deux chefs d’Etat ont juge necessaire de
convoquer une reunion des ministres des Affaires etrangères de la
CEI pour evaluer la situation et trouver des moyens de regler tous
les conflits geles dans l’espace de la CEI – au Haut Karabakh, en
Transnistrie, en Abkhazie et en Ossetie du Sud.

Le Kirghizstan, qui assure la presidence de la CEI, mène des
consultations avec ses partenaires de la CEI, selon M.Bakiev. "Tout
le monde condamne ce qui s’est passe. Mais il faut des mecanismes
pour regler ces questions complexes. Il faut que le Conseil des chefs
d’Etat de la CEI trouve des methodes de règlement de ces problèmes
qui n’entraînent pas de victimes", a dit M.Bakiev.

–Boundary_(ID_VAwD0gRhAVvkqy1buDqKOQ)- –

Foreigners Flee Georgia After Attack On Ossetia

FOREIGNERS FLEE GEORGIA AFTER ATTACK ON OSSETIA
By Kirill Besonov

Moscow News
15/08/2008
Russia

Thousands of foreign citizens left Georgia after the attack on
South Ossetia and the subsequent involvement of Russian troops who
moved in to secure peace in the region. With air traffic crippled as
Georgia announced it was in a state of war, many people had to move
to neighboring Armenia by buses and car convoys to get to safety.

The United States was the first to start the evacuation. On Sunday
and Monday, about 170 U.S. citizens left the Georgian capital of
Tbilisi and were delivered across the border with Armenia by car
convoys. The evacuees included businessmen and tourists and also
families and dependants of U.S. diplomats stationed in Georgia. The
entire staff of the U.S. Peace Corps in Georgia also left the country
before Thursday. The U.S. embassy in Tbilisi, however, remained open
and provided consultations. On Wednesday the U.S. State Department
issued a notice in which it advised all Americans to leave Georgia
despite the Russian order to end military action.

Seeing the great increase in people willing to leave Georgia, Armenian
authorities introduced a simplified scheme of border crossing, allowing
about 2,000 foreign citizens to enter the country, from where they
could head home. According to the Arme­nian Foreign Ministry report,
about 2,000 foreigners entered Armenia from Georgia between Sunday
and Wednesday. This figure included many diplomats and their family
members. In addition, about 7,500 Armenian citizens chose to return
to their country.

The route through Armenia beca­me the most popular way for so many
people because Georgia stop­ped air traffic with Russia and many
other countries, including Germany and Ukraine. Some destinations,
such as Latvia and Israel were still accessible, but given the number
of potential passengers, there were not enough places for everyone.

Several Russian citizens reported that Georgian authorities barred
them from leaving the country. They said their papers were checked
and they were ordered to return to their places of residence. The
Russian Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday it received about 12 phone
calls with such complaints. The Georgian side said the move was caused
by security fears, but Russian diplomats still considered issuing a
protest against the infringement of the Russian citizens’ rights.

There were no reports of casualties among foreigners in the latest
Georgian-Ossetian conflict, but according to the International News
Safety Institute, four journalists were reported dead as of Thursday
morning. The killed were Alexander Klimchuk, the Russian owner of
Georgia’s independent photo agency Caucasus Press Images; Grigol
Chikhladze from Newsweek Russia; and Dutch cameraman Stans Storimans,
39, of the news station RTL. A so-far unidentified Georgian journalist
and his driver were also reported dead, the INSI report read. At
least 10 journalists were reported wounded.

–Boundary_(ID_XAzGRIkcNjqQu5T+CKxPhw)–