Stuck In Georgia

STUCK IN GEORGIA

New York Times
weds1.html
Aug 27 2008

This is where things stand nearly three weeks after Russia invaded
Georgia and radically upended ties with the West: Russian troops still
occupy key areas including the port of Poti; Moscow has recognized the
independence of Georgia’s two breakaway regions; Georgia’s president,
Mikheil Saakashvili, is still talking tough even though his army is
routed and his country shattered.

And if that isn’t unnerving enough, President Bush has decided to
dispatch Vice President Dick Cheney, that master of diplomacy, to
the region.

Awash in oil wealth and giddy after crushing tiny Georgia, Russia’s
leaders are striking back at real and imagined humiliations. The
West’s failure to fully marshal its leverage is painful to watch. But
Russia also has a lot to lose. Moscow’s decision to recognize South
Ossetia and Abkhazia will only harden battle lines and sow further
regional instability.

Recognizing these enclaves could inspire a host of rebellions around
and inside Russia: Transdniester from Moldova, Nagorno-Karabakh from
Azerbaijan and the oil-rich province of Tatarstan from Russia. If
Moscow has forgotten its horrifying war to suppress the Chechens,
we have not.

We know some in the Kremlin don’t care if ties with the West are
broken. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, the dark hand behind Russia’s
aggression, blustered this week that Russia would be better off if
it didn’t join the World Trade Organization.

While many Russians are cheering him now, we doubt that they will
be eager to return to the grim days of Soviet isolation. For all its
oil wealth, Russia is still a poorly developed, corrupt and fragile
state. It is not in its long-term economic and security interest to
divorce from the international mainstream.

The Bush administration deserves considerable blame for letting this
crisis get so far out of hand. Since the invasion, it has deftly
bolstered Georgia, using military transports to deliver humanitarian
aid. It gets mixed marks for its response to Russia. The White House
eagerly used the crisis to seal a missile defense deal with Poland —
adding to Mr. Putin’s list of resentments. It also, more sensibly,
suspended military cooperation and a civilian nuclear deal worth
billions to Moscow, but left the door open for reviving both.

We do not know what Mr. Cheney will say when he visits Georgia,
Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Italy next week. The last thing the world
needs now is him inciting more resentments and anxieties. Georgia’s
president certainly seems to have learned nothing from the last
few weeks, telling The Times that he would continue his campaign to
reassert Georgian control over South Ossetia and Abkhazia. He seemed
to think that Washington would back him up.

A blustering visit from Mr. Cheney would also make it far easier for
the Europeans to avoid doing what they need to do: send their own
clear message to Moscow that there will be no business as usual. That
does not mean completely isolating Russia. But when the Europeans meet
next week, they should agree to put on hold a trade and security deal
with Moscow so long as it continues to occupy Georgia and threaten
its neighbors.

Ties between Russia and the West are now the worst in a generation. It
will take toughness and subtlety to ensure they do not lock into a
permanent confrontation — not more bluster from anyone.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/27/opinion/27

Government Releases 31 Million Drams To Update Armenian Red Book

GOVERNMENT RELEASES 31 MILLION DRAMS TO UPDATE ARMENIAN RED BOOK.

ARMENPRESS
Aug 26, 2008

YEREVAN, AUGUST 26, ARMENPRESS: The government of Armenia has released
31 million Drams for the nature protection ministry to prepare the
updated version of the Armenian Red Book.

The two-volume edition is about Armenia’s fauna. It will be released
by the end of the year.

Tatiana Danielian, head of a ministry department dealing with
bio-diversity and water resources protection issues, told Armenpress
that about 40 specialists of the ministry in cooperation with
colleagues from the Biology and Zoology Institute of the National
Academy of Sciences are doing field researches in Lori, Vayots Dzor,
Tavush, Gegharkunik and Kotayk provinces to learn the condition of
species which are on the brink of extinction and design moves to
ensure their protection and reproduction.

She said as a result of studies the scientists defined a list of 200
species of plants and 10 species of animals to be included in the
Book for the first time.

Tatiana Danielian said also the council of scientists has decided to
organize an effective supervision over the species which are on the
brink of extinction, which she said is mainly due to social-economic
changes which affect bio-diversity.

Council Of Europe ‘White Book’ On Inter-Cultural Dialogue Will Be

COUNCIL OF EUROPE ‘WHITE BOOK’ ON INTER-CULTURAL DIALOGUE WILL BE PRESENTED IN ARMENIA

ARMENPRESS
Aug 26, 2008

YEREVAN, AUGUST 26, ARMENPRESS: The White Book of the Council of
Europe on inter-cultural dialogue will be presented in Armenia on
October 8-9. The book won the approval of the Council of Europe
foreign ministers when they met earlier this year on May 7.

Gayane Durgarian, a press officer for the Armenian ministry of culture,
told Armenpress that concurrently Armenia’s culture policy will be
presented within the frameworks of the Council of Europe Compendium
Program. The gathering will also discuss ways of strengthening
rmenia’s culture cooperation with the Council of Europe.

Gabriella Bataini-Dragoni, head of the Council of Europe directorate
in charge of education, culture, heritage, sport and youth issues,
will arrive in Yerevan at the invitation of Armenian culture minister
Hasmik Poghosian to take part in the event.

Delivery Of Goods To Armenia From Georgia And Iran Normalizes

DELIVERY OF GOODS TO ARMENIA FROM GEORGIA AND IRAN NORMALIZES

ARMENPRESS
Aug 26, 2008

YEREVAN, AUGUST 26, ARMENPRESS: Gagik Martirosian, an aide to prime
minister and head of a task force, set up to coordinate delivery of
goods to Armenia from neighboring Georgia and Iran, told Armenpress
that Armenia-bound carriages are moving over the alternative bridge
near the town of Kaspi , 40 km off the central Georgian town of Gori.

The main bridge blown up on August 16 is still being repaired. About
100 carriages passed over the bridge heading for Armenia and part of
them have crossed into Armenia today morning, according to Martirosian.

Carriages are bringing wheat, fuel and other commodities, including
foodstuff and building materials. Some 200 carriages laden with same
goods are waiting in line to go over the bridge. Gagik Martirosian
said the lines on both sides of the bridge are expected to disappear
in 2-3 days.

He said flour, fuel and other commodities are being brought to
Armenia also by trucks from the Georgian port of Batumi. He added
that unloading of ships resumed in Batumi and Poti ports of Georgia
and besides goods are arriving from Iran.

Recognizing Abkhazia And South Ossetia

RECOGNIZING ABKHAZIA AND SOUTH OSSETIA
By A. Manvelian

AZG Armenian Daily
27/08/2008

Global, Regional

The resolution of the Russian President Dmitry Medvedyev to recognize
those self-declared states, which split from Georgia, starts a wave
of changes both in CIS and in world politics. Obviously, neither
the EU nor the United States shall follow Russia’s example, although
Medvedyev advised them to.

It is also obvious that irrespective of the West’s position, a new
process is starting in the practice of international relations,
which can be called a period of semi-recognized states.

Again, irrespective how Europe and America do feel about the process,
it is them who started it. It is them who, breaking the international
procedure of recognizing new sovereign states, recognized the
independence of Kosovo.

And now Russia, previously warning the West against such actions,
follows the very example of the west and recognizes Abkhazia and
South Ossetia. This means that there is no way back for Kosovo and
Russia shall never recognize it. It also becomes obvious that Serbia
finally lost Kosovo and Georgia lost Abkhazia with South Ossetia.

Still there is something positive about this matter for Armenia,
as henceforth Armenia’s recognition of the independence of
Nagorno-Karabakh will not be considered as weird as it used to. And
Karabakh’s independence is vital in sense of its security and the
further development of Armenia.

It is also obvious that Turkey’s plans of establishing a
new organization in South Caucasus are becoming less and less
realistic. This does not mean that Erdogan’s initiative will not
be considered on different, even the highest, levels. Anyways for a
very long time yet it will be impossible to push Georgia and Russia
to constructive talks.

However in such circumstances the role of Armenia in the region is
growing. Armenia will become more important not only because of being
the only stable state with steady development rates in South Caucasus,
but also because of becoming an alternative way for the West to reach
the energy sources of the Caspian.

This is why the questioning the border with Armenia is becoming more
and more important for Turkey, as the Georgian communications will
not be reliable any more.

To be reminded, two days ago George Bush made a statement urging Russia
to not to recognize Abkhazia and Ossetia. The debatable resolution
of Dmitry Medvedyev showed the world that the statements from the
White House are not as influential as they were before.

It Would Be Better For Azerbaijan To Recognize First NKR Independenc

IT WOULD BE BETTER FOR AZERBAIJAN TO RECOGNIZE FIRST NKR INDEPENDENCE
By K.G., Stepanakert

AZG Armenian Daily
27/08/2008

Karabakh conflict

At the request of "Azg" daily correspondent, Chairman of NKR National
Assembly Foreign Relations Commission Vahram Atanesian commented
on the Russian Lower and Upper Chambers’ decisions on recognition
of independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. "In my opinion, the
decisions taken by the Russian Parliament’s Upper and Lower Chambers
will not be followed by any legal act; and the Russian President
and Government will probably wait for the answer of the EU summit on
September 1.

However, independent of everything, the last developments in the world
confirm that the European Security and Cooperation Pact is undergoing
a transformation. It took place in Balkans then in South Ossetia.

It would be better if Azerbaijan taking into account the
above-mentioned recognized first the independence of Nagorno
Karabakh. That would give it an opportunity to be engaged directly
in the discussion of the controversial issues.

I think that today Azerbaijan has an exceptional opportunity to have
its special place in the civilized world, and it would be better if
the authorities of that country do not miss the opportunity", he said.

September 5 Rally Will Be A Response"

"SEPTEMBER 5 RALLY WILL BE A RESPONSE"

A1+
[05:30 pm] 26 August, 2008

"The recent events and ongoing violations in Northern Avenue testify to
the deplorable level of the Armenian authorities’ mental abilities. For
already two days the police crack down on the participants of the
sit-down protest in North Avenue," says Levon Zurabian, member of
the Centre for Armenian Pan-National Movement.

In the passing two days the police tore the strikers’ posters taking
along the desks of enrollment for the Armenian Pan-National Congress
and collection of signatures for bringing Robert Kocharian before the
court of the Hague. They urged the presentees to continue the action
without posters and stands.

"The authorities fear the unprecedented momentum of the Pan-National
Movement, enrollment for Congress and signature collection. They
also fear the upcoming September 5 Pan-Armenian rally and the wave
of complaint throughout the country," Levon Zurabian said during an
August 26 meeting with journalists.

Zurabian thinks the authorities’ employ force in reply to ideas. "Is
their anything more disgraceful than a struggle against posters by
brute force?"

"Suffering a moral and political defeat the authorities try to shift
the struggle onto the force field," he says.

Zurabian calls for restraint and consolidation.

"The best response of Armenian citizens’ to this totalitarian regime
will be their active participation in the September 5 rally. The
dictatorial pyramid already reaching its climax will surely collapse
one day crowning our citizens with glorious victory. The large-scale
rally will simply bring us closer to that blissful moment," he
concluded.

Note, yesterday Yerevan City Hall turned down the notifications for
the September 5 rally and march.

OSCE Chairman Condemn’s Russia’s Recognition Of Independence

OSCE CHAIRMAN CONDEMNS RUSSIA’S RECOGNITION OF INDEPENDENCE

A1+
[05:53 pm] 26 August, 2008

The OSCE Chairman-in-Office, Finnish Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb,
today condemned the decision by Russia to recognise the independence
of the breakaway Georgian regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

"The recognition of independence for South Ossetia and Abkhazia
violates fundamental OSCE principles. As all OSCE participating States,
Russia is committed to respecting the sovereignty and territorial
integrity of others."

"Russia should follow OSCE principles by respecting the territorial
integrity and sovereignty of Georgia. Russia should immediately
withdraw all troops from Georgia and implement the ceasefire agreement,
including the modalities defined in the 16 August letter of French
President Nicolas Sarkozy. The international community cannot accept
unilaterally established buffer zones," said Stubb.

The OSCE will continue to monitor the implementation of the ceasefire
agreement. It stands ready to further assist in stabilizing the
situation.

"Military Actions Are Not A Way Out"

"MILITARY ACTIONS ARE NOT A WAY OUT"

A1+
[06:26 pm] 26 August, 2008

U.S. Charge d’Affaires, a.i. Joseph Pennington thinks the "latest
crisis" in the region shows that the borders must finally be opened to
restore economic and diplomatic ties between Armenia and Turkey. In
this respect, the short-time opening of the Armenian-Turkish border
during the Georgian-Ossetian war must serve as a precedent for the
two countries.

The U.S. Charge d’Affaires declined to answer a journalist’s question
whether Russia’s recognition of Ossetia and Abkhazia independence
will affect the region.

"I can say nothing in this respect. The USA endorses Georgia’s
territorial integrity. I urge the conflicting sides, including Russia,
to meet the commitments of cease-fire regime," said Pennington.

Asked whether the recent events in the region may effect the
Armenian-Azeri relations, the U.S. Charge d’Affaires said: "We saw
the tragic outcome of the Georgian-Ossetian conflict. It must serve
as a good lesson for Armenia and Azerbaijan and they must realize
that they will gain nothing with military actions."

A journalist asked Mr. Pennington to comment on yesterday’s incident
in Northern Avenue during which policemen attacked sit-down strikers
and tore the posters of political prisoners.

"I don’t want to make any comments. I see both progress and drawbacks
in the Armenian authorities’ actions. Anyway, we stand ready to further
cooperate with the Armenian leadership to effect apparent changes."

"Georgia Lost All Hopes"

"GEORGIA LOST ALL HOPES"

A1+
[07:06 pm] 26 August, 2008

An interview with Arman Grigorian, member of the Central Office of
the Armenian National Congress.

Mr. Grigorian, as I understand, you are an expert on conflicts,
including on internal conflicts and interventions. I also know that
you have dealt with the conflicts in Georgia in your work. What is
your assessment of the situation in Georgia?

The situation can only be characterized as an unmitigated disaster
for Georgia. I think Georgia has lost all hope of ever regaining
even nominal control of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, its military
capabilities and infrastructure have been severely crippled, Russian
forces control Poti, as well as the strategic highway connecting the
Eastern and Western parts of Georgia, which gives them tremendous
leverage at the negotiating table, and finally, the war has made it
painfully clear how much help Georgia can count on from the West, which
is not that much. Despite the high pitch anti-Russian rhetoric in the
US, President Bush and the Secretary of Defense Robert Gates had to
assure the American people that the US will not go to war with Russia
over Georgia, removing much of the calculated ambiguity regarding
the true level of American commitment to Georgia’s security. In
sum, I think this is one of the darkest times in the modern history
of Georgia.

By all indications it was the Georgian government that decided to
escalate in South Ossetia. Given the catastrophic results for the
country, why do you think Sahakashvili and his government made such a
decision? Was it simple incompetence and irrationality that drove them?

That is indeed one of the most interesting questions about this
conflict. Ultimately, Sahakashvili’s policy has failed, and it
was a predictable failure, therefore it is not too unfair to call
Sahakashvili’s competence into question. But we should resist the
temptation to see it as just incompetence, because even incompetent
governments don’t start wars all the time. So there is usually more
to such decisions than that. What is behind Sahakashvili’s decision in
my view? Before answering that question, however, I would like to say
a few words about the official Georgian argument. According to that
argument, Georgia was not the initiator of the conflict. The conflict
rather was initiated by the Ossetes who had been shelling Georgian
villages prior to the Georgian escalation. The spokesperson of the
Georgian Foreign Ministry, in fact, called Washington on August 6 – one
day before the launch of the operation – to tell that Georgia was under
attack, and that the government had to protect its people. I don’t buy
the Georgian government’s argument for two reasons, even if we take
its claim that Ossetes were shelling Georgians villages at face value.

First, the evidence suggests that the ultimate aim was the ethnic
cleansing of the Ossetian population of South Ossetia rather than
suppression of fire, which means that the alleged Ossetian shelling
was a pretext rather than the cause that triggered the Georgian
move. Second, the fact of Ossetian shelling, if indeed it is a fact,
may serve as a moral justification as to why Georgia had to respond,
if we forget the scale of that response for the moment, but not an
explanation for why it did, because the Georgian response was very
likely to trigger a Russian intervention. Georgian leaders must have
considered the possible Russian reaction independent of the moral case
of their position and somehow concluded that either Russia would not
intervene, or that Georgia would have sufficient support from the US
to fight Russia off if it did.

Could Georgians have possibly thought that Russia would not intervene,
and could such a prognosis be reasonable under any circumstances?

Obviously, we don’t know whether this is the conclusion that
Saakashvili’s government reached. If it is, the reasoning behind it
would be problematic to say the least, but it would not be totally
irrational despite the explicit Russian threats of intervention in case
of a Georgian attack on South Ossetia and Abkhazia. I say this because
this is the first time that Russia has done something seriously at odds
with American preferences in 20 years. Russia has made many threats
in this period – in response to the two rounds of NATO expansion,
the abrogation of the ABM treaty, the attack on Serbia, etc. – and I
cannot recall a single case where any of those threats were carried
out. Russia has been so weak and so concerned about projecting
a non-aggressive image that it has chosen to give in every time,
rather than react when its interests were infringed upon. This has
seriously eroded the credibility of Russian threats. That this time the
Russian threat was going to be carried out, therefore, was subject to
considerable and justified skepticism, as reckless as it looks after
the fact. Nonetheless, I think it is unlikely that Sahakashvili and
his team had completely bet on Russian inaction when they made their
decision. More likely, they thought that Russia would intervene, but
they catastrophically misjudged two things – the ferocity and scale
of the Russian intervention, i.e. the prospect that Russia would push
beyond South Ossetia instead of simply restoring the status quo ante;
and the likelihood of getting support from the Unites States in case
of that limited Russian intervention.

But how could they think that the US was going to help them? Could
they really have expected that the US was going to go to war against
Russia for Georgia? Isn’t such an expectation itself evidence of
Georgian leader’s utter incompetence?

I am reluctant to see it as nothing more than Sahakashvili’s
incompetence. I would like to emphasize again that we should try
to see the logic of his decision as a composite of two elements –
the expectation of a limited intervention and the expectation of
American help in case of such an intervention, not necessarily in the
form of initiating a shooting war against Russia. Sahakashvili and
his government predicted in all likelihood that Russia would throw
the Georgian army out of South Ossetia and stop. If simultaneously
they thought South Ossetia was going to be lost anyway in case of
doing nothing, doing something would start to look at least no worse
than doing nothing, provided the assumption is that of a limited
intervention. I think they also predicted, not unreasonably, that the
escalation would sharpen the Russian-American antagonism over Georgia,
which would draw Americans closer, increase their military presence
in Georgia, increase their military aid to Georgia, and improve the
likelihood of Georgia’s membership in NATO. All of this in turn would
increase the pressure on Russia to be more conciliatory in both South
Ossetia and Abkhazia.

I think this was a terrible theory of victory, but a tempting one,
since as I said Russia has not come out on top in a single dispute
with NATO in the last 20 years. Thinking that this time would be
different apparently required a little more imagination than the
Georgian leaders had. And Georgians are not the only ones who thought
along these lines. In a very interesting article that was published
during the war, the Los Angeles Times had quoted David Phillips,
who is a well-connected analyst in Washington, saying that "the last
thing Russia wants is a war with the West. If they came eye to eye
with NATO warplanes, they would retreat." I can assure you that in
the US Phillips is not the exception to the rule in this regard.

What do you think was the exact role of the USA in all of this? More
specifically, there is an opinion, sometimes voiced in the Russian
media, that Sahakashvili was either prodded by the Americans to attack
South Ossetia or that he at least had a green light from them. Do
you think that opinion is justified?

The answer to that question cannot be unequivocal. There is
considerable evidence that the Secretary of State Rice urged restraint
on Sahkashvili and warned against doing anything too bold more than
once. At the same time, however, I think the US government did not
do enough to restrain him. Even worse, Sahakashvili did receive some
mixed signals.

Can you elaborate on this a little more?

Sure. The signals were mixed in two ways. First, the same group of
people would tell Sahakashvili not to do anything reckless, but then
would make extremely strong public statements designed to reassure
Georgia and to contain Russia. Certain doors were opened in Washington
for Sahakashvili that would be opened for very few leaders. Most
importantly, Americans were supplying and training the Georgian
military. Such shows of support could legitimately be interpreted
as indicators of a very high degree of Washington’s interest in
protecting Georgia. They also intentionally or unintentionally
staked the American reputation on defending Georgia, even if they
did not imply any legal obligations. As a result, Sahakashvili
could have thought that the US would intervene to protect its own
credibility as an ally, even if the Secretary of State was telling
him behind closed doors that he should behave himself. There was a
second way in which the signals were mixed, and it has to do with
the incoherence that sometimes characterizes the working of the
American government. Often we think of it as a perfectly ordered,
hierarchically structured set of institutions, which acts as a single,
coherent unit with a centralized decision-making mechanism. That is
not how it always works, however. There are issue areas and cases,
where the White House, the CIA, the State Department, and the Pentagon
all have their different policies. Something along these lines in all
likelihood was happening in the case of Georgia, where vice-president
Cheney and his office, according to several major American newspapers,
were far more encouraging of Sahakashvili’s belligerence than the
State Department. Given this picture, and the fact that the current
American vice-president is a particularly powerful individual, I
can easily imagine how Sahakashvili chose to read only the signals
coming from him and his office, since those signals confirmed his
biases. Such selective reading of signals is actually a very general
cognitive defect, which to some degree affects us all.

Now I would like to move from explaining the conflict to speculating
on its consequences. Do you think this will lead to a new cold war
between the US and Russia?

If we look at both the American and Russian strategic interests,
the answer should be no. Indeed, Russia and the USA should have
been close partners a long time ago, because their interests overlap
in a number of areas – nuclear proliferation, the struggle against
radical Islam, Russia being a an alternative to the Gulf as an energy
supplier, the rise of China, etc. But strategic interests are not
what always drive American foreign policy. Especially in good times,
and the last 20 years have been good times for the US, foreign policy
becomes hostage to special interests, which is the only explanation
for the American elites’ reluctance to establish a more cooperative
relationship with Russia. The American defense-industrial complex,
which is in a desperate search of a serious enemy since the early
1990’s to justify its massively oversized existence, the myriad ethnic
lobbies, which have all kinds of grudges against Russia, the gigantic
army of experts and bureaucrats suffering from Cold War nostalgia,
etc., all have interests that are quite distinct from what I think
the American strategic interests are, and which have successfully
imposed their agenda on the American people up to this point. These
special interests remain very powerful and practically unchecked
today by any counterlobbies, which does not bode well for the future
of American-Russian relations. I also fear that after having watched
its ally get pounded by Russia, the US is going to try to punish
Russia somehow in order not to let the Russians think that they can
throw their weight around now. Russia, meanwhile, has regained some of
its strength and is definitely going to demand more respect from now
on. A new cold war, therefore, is at least a possibility. I should add,
however, that this time much will depend on the policies of Germany and
France, which do not want a cold war, as well as on the developments
in Iraq, Afghanistan, and soon probably in Pakistan, which may make
a new cold war with Russia excessively costly for the US.

Finally, I would like to know your opinion about the consequences of
this war for Armenia, as well as its likely effects on the settlement
for the Karabagh conflict.

First about the effects on the Ossetian war on the Karabagh
conflict. One positive result is that the likes of Vafa Gulizade in
Azerbaijan have stopped praising the Georgian policy and advocating
a similar approach to "solve" the Karabagh conflict, which they
were doing at very high decibels during the first couple of days of
the war. The outcome in Ossetia must have had a sobering effect on
Gulizade and others of his ilk, and that is a very good thing. At
the same time, I don’t think the outcome in South Ossetia, and the
related fact that Russia is considering the de jure recognition of
both South Ossetia and Abkhazia, has markedly increased the chances
of Karabagh’s de jure recognition by Russia, which is a prospect some
people now consider very likely. As for the general effects of the
war, my answer is quite simple and straightforward: a war between
the two most important countries for Armenia cannot possibly be good
news. Georgia is Armenia’s lifeline, and the military alliance with
Russia is Armenia’s main security guarantee. The deepening of their
hostility is going to make the maintenance of the very difficult
balance between them that much more difficult, especially if the
US-Russian relations deteriorate further and Americans get more
closely involved.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress