Armenia Welcomes Turkey Plan For Talks On Regional Security

ARMENIA WELCOMES TURKEY PLAN FOR TALKS ON REGIONAL SECURITY

Interfax
Aug 20 2008
Russia

Armenia welcomes Turkey’s plans to start talks on regional cooperation
and security.

"Armenia has always advocated dialog and talks, especially over
issues of cooperation and security in our region," Armenian Foreign
Minister Edvard Nalbandian said in answer to questions from the
Turkish newspaper Zaman.

"We welcome the Turkish prime minister’s statement on the plans to
start talks with Armenia on these issues," Nalbandian said, according
to the Armenian Foreign Ministry’s press service.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan said that the events in South
Ossetia necessitate the creation of a platform of peace and cooperation
in the Caucasus region.

Tbilisi and Moscow spoke positively of the Turkish initiative. The
Turkish prime minister flew to Baku on Wednesday for talks with the
Azeri president.

Meanwhile, Armenia and Turkey do not maintain diplomatic relations,
and the Armenian-Turkish border has been closed since 1993 on Armenia’s
initiative.

Armenians Of Southern Georgian Region Seek Autonomy

ARMENIANS OF SOUTHERN GEORGIAN REGION SEEK AUTONOMY

Azg
Aug 20 2008
Armenia

"Georgia’s only way is federative country"

The board of non-governmental organizations of Armenians in [Georgia’s]
Samtskhe-Javakhk [Samtskhe-Javakhketi] and Kvemo Kartveli has issued a
statement, which says in particular: "It is apparent that the civilian
population suffers most from the attempts to settle inter-ethnic
issues by military methods. We, the public representatives of the
Armenians in Samtskhe-Javakhk and Kvemo Kartveli regions, being
concerned about peace and stability and the future of our country,
believe that in order to restore Georgia’s territorial integrity
and sovereignty in a stable and democratic way, in order to settle
the current ethnic problems fairly, Georgia should be a federation
consisting of regional units and central government."

The statement also says that "Samtskhe-Javakhk, with its current
borders, and those neighboring villages of Kvemo Kartveli that are
predominantly populated by Armenians should be reorganized as an
autonomous region within the federative Georgian state, granting it
substantial self-governing rights." The statement then concludes:
"We realize that this statement will not be accepted in the same way
by everybody: there will be attempts to misinterpret and exploit
it. But we, being citizens who are concerned about the fate of
Georgia, had to repeat this truth we have been voicing for years. We
will be led exclusively by the interests of Georgia and its part of
Samtskhe-Javakhk. The memory of those killed in the recent clashes
calls for this, this is what Georgia’s future calls for."

Armenia’s Under 21 National Football Squad Beat Peers From Turkey 2-

ARMENIA’S UNDER 21 NATIONAL FOOTBALL SQUAD BEAT PEERS FROM TURKEY 2-1

ARMENPRESS
Aug 21, 2008

YEREVAN, AUGUST 21, ARMENPRESS: Armenia’s under 21 national football
squad upset peers from Turkey on Wednesday in Yerevan 2-1. The two
last goals from Karlen Mkrtchian and Henrik Mkhitaryan denied Turkey
a move to the top of qualifying Group 2.

Turkey needed three points to leapfrog the Czech Republic and take
pole position in the race for the UEFA European Under-21 Championship
play-offs.

The Turks did their best to exploit their best players. The first
goal was scored by Turkey at 66 minute. However, to the delight of
a 12,000-strong crowd at the Hrazdan Stadium in Yerevan, Mkrtchian
finished from a Goharyan free-kick one minute from time, with
Mkhitaryan atoning for his earlier miss in added time by scoring the
second goal.

Armenia has now 10 points, the Czech have 14 and Turkey 13 points.

Foreign minister Edward Nalbandian and president of the Armenian
Football Federation Ruben Hayrapetian met with players after the
match to congratulate them on the brilliant victory.

Speaking at a news conference after the game Turkish head coach Mutif
Erkasap said they were given ‘excellent’ welcome in Armenia. He said
his players expected the game to be too tough and tense, but their
fears did not prove.

UNDP And Armenian Government Signed Memorandum On Reduction Of Noxio

UNDP AND ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT SIGNED MEMORANDUM ON REDUCTION OF NOXIOUS EMISSION IN ATMOSPHERE

arminfo
2008-08-19 15:12:00

ArmInfo. Today UNDP and Armenian Nature Protection Ministry made a
memorandum on reduction of noxious emissions in atmosphere, signed
by permanent representative of UNDP in Armenia Consuelo Vidal and
Armenian Nature Protection Minister Aram Harutyunyan.

The memorandum supposes cooperation of Armenia with the developed
countries in the sphere of reduction of noxious emissions in atmosphere
within the frames of the so-called ‘Pure development ways’. Such
projects should promote stable development of the country, its economic
growth, resolving of ecological and social problems via attracting
of foreign investments and introduction of innovation technologies,
the minister said.

Armenia initiated 10 projects within the frames of "Pure development"
in agriculture, energy, woods protection, etc.

CEC Registers All Candidates For Prefect And Elders Council Election

CEC REGISTERS ALL CANDIDATES FOR PREFECT AND ELDERS COUNCIL ELECTIONS IN YEREVAN DISTRICTS

ARMENPRESS
Aug 19, 2008

YEREVAN, AUGUST 19, ARMENPRESS: Tatevik Ohanian, a press secretary
for the Central Election Commission (CEC), said to Armenpress that
the CEC registered all candidates for prefect and elders council
elections in several Yerevan districts scheduled for September 7.

She said one of the candidates, Nelsik Grigorian, a non-partisan, who
intended to contest the post of prefect of Kanaker-Zeytoon district,
walked out of the race. Other districts are Achapnyak, Arabkir,
Erebuni, Malatia-Sebastia and Nubarashen.

The highest competition will be in Arabkir district where the
prefect’s post will be contested by several candidates representing
the governing Republican Party, the opposition Zharangutyun (Heritage)
party, a non-partisan candidate and one from the recently established
Armenian National Congress.

It will be tough also in Kanaker Zeytoon district, where the post
will be contested by candidates from the ruling party, opposition
and a non-partisan.

A close-up view of the tragedy befalling the people of Georgia

In-Forum, ND

A close-up view of the tragedy befalling the people of Georgia
Jane Ahlin,

Published Sunday, August 17, 2008

Jane Ahlin teaches English as an adjunct faculty member at MSUM. A
former commentator for KDSU (ND Public Radio), she has written for The
Forum opinion pages since 1989. Her column appears Sundays in The
Forum.

Wednesday’s e-mail from my friend in Georgia is lighthearted. The war
`seems to be over.’ She is `in a small village way East’ and, with
Georgian friends, has `bought fresh pork butt just slaughtered one
hour ago and then fresh trout ¦ to have a barbeque.’ In an aside to
her mother she says, `Mom, I told everyone that you would worry more
about the pork in the hot trunk than the Russians.’

Starkly different in tone from the frenetic e-mails since the onset of
war between Georgia and Russia when she still was in Tblisi, her words
convey a return to equilibrium. She is with friends, eating and
drinking, enjoying a pleasant moment after a long frightening weekend
of tragic loss. If not ongoing, the momentary relief had to have been
welcome

During the short war, however, there was no calm. Almost immediately,
my friend took in a young couple with a newborn baby because they
could not return to Gori where their neighborhood had been
bombed. (Note: even in Georgia, where people barely eke out a living,
war is televised. The young couple watched the bombing of their own
neighborhood on TV, not knowing whether other family members got out
safely.) After a few days, the couple with their newborn went on to
Armenia.

About the same time, my friend found out she had another family to
worry about, a family she had lived with briefly after arriving in
Georgia. Their entire village of 7,000 was evacuated, then bombed, and
the family who had been kind to her had to flee with nothing.

Understandably, my friend was upset by the initial American response
to Russia’s brutality; however, she was not as shocked as her Georgian
friends who remembered President Bush’s 2005 visit to their country, a
visit in which he was greeted like a rock star. In a country with
fewer than 5 million people, 150,000 turned out to hear him
speak. They cheered when he said, `The path of freedom you have chosen
is not easy, but you will not travel it alone ¦ as you build a free
and democratic Georgia, the American people will stand with you.’
Georgians loved him so much, they named a street after him.

But that was 2005. Here are Mr. Bush’s words at the onset of the war:
`I was very firm with Vladimir Putin ` he and I have got a good
relationship ` just like I was firm with the Russian president. And
hopefully this will get resolved peacefully. There needs to be an
international mediation there for the South Ossetia issue.’

Later, expressing disappointment over Bush’s lukewarm reaction,
Georgian President Saakashvili said, `Frankly, some of the first
statements [by Bush] were seen as a green light for Russia.’

The irony that French President Sarkozy as head of the European Union
was carrying the message for the West also was hard to escape
(remember freedom fries?). Even some of Bush’s most ardent supporters
wondered what was going on. (Was the president duped by the
reassurances of his friend, `Vlad,’ while they were in Beijing?) As
conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer wrote in the Washington
Post, Bush `needs to make up for his mini-Katrina moment when he
lingered in Beijing yukking it up with our beach volleyball team while
Putin flew to North Ossetia to direct the invasion of a neighboring
country.’

More importantly, the concern of other former Soviet bloc countries
underscored the sobering situation. Standing with Saakashvili and
fellow leaders of Poland, Estonia and Latvia, Lithuanian President
Adamkus said, `Let the world finally wake up and take the action and
provide the real security for the region.’ By then, the United States
had gotten tough: Humanitarian aid was sent to Georgia via military
transport and Condoleezza Rice was sent to France and on to Georgia.

As for my friend, she’s back in Tblisi, frustrated by international
political games being played at Georgia’s expense, wondering what will
happen next, and spending her days trying to get aid for the displaced
family from the village.

Ahlin, Fargo, is a regular contributor to The Forum’s commentary
pages. E-mail [email protected]

Georgia: Terror fears over whereabouts of region’s nuclear material

Georgia: Terror fears over whereabouts of region’s nuclear material
Georgia’s conflict with Russia has raised fresh concerns over the
whereabouts of the region’s nuclear material that could be used by
terrorists to make a "dirty bomb".

By Thomas Harding, Defence Correspondent

Daily Telegraph/UK
Last Updated: 6:50PM BST 17 Aug 2008

When the breakaway region of Abkhazia split from Georgia in 1993, the
world’s only known case of enriched uranium going missing was reported
after up to 2kg of the potentially devastating material was stolen from
a laboratory.

There are now fears that the organised criminal gangs that are rife in
the region could exploit the confusion of the current conflict to loot
other stocks.

Security services are worried that terrorist organisations such as
al-Qa’eda could purchase weapons grade uranium and mix it with a
detonator as basic as fertiliser to make a deadly device. While an
estimated 15kg of uranium is needed to make a nuclear bomb just a small
amount is needed for an unconventional device.

"There is no fear of a nuclear bomb coming out of this region but the
bigger danger is that a small amount of uranium combined with
conventional explosive terrorists could make a dirty bomb that would
make an area the size of the City’s Square Mile unusable for 30 or 40
years," said a security source. "The economic impact would be
catastrophic."

Between half a kg and 2kg of uranium-235 was taken from a physics
institute in Abkhazia’s principal town Sukhumi after scientists fled
during fighting but was not discovered as missing until four years
later in 1997.

But it is not the only incident in the region. A smuggler attempted to
sell up to 3kg of uranium in South Ossetia three years ago with a price
tag of $1 million per 100 grams. While not enough to make a nuclear
device it could contribute to a dirty bomb. The Russian smuggler, from
North Ossetia, never had the chance to sell the entire stock after he
was arrested by Georgian security forces. The uranium was found to be
90 per cent pure, which is weapons grade standard.

Before she retired as MI5’s director general Eliza Manningham Buller
warned that it was only a "question of time" before terrorists could
assemble a dirty bomb.

The separatist regions in Georgia could prove a goldmine for
radioactive material which would have a huge value on the black market.

In the last decade there have been a number of occasions when
traffickers have been caught with uranium including a smuggler stopped
on the Armenian border with a tablet of the heavy metal in a packet of
tea.

In the Georgian capital of Tbilisi in 2003 a weighed-down taxi was
found with lead lined boxes contained the strontium and caesium, both
highly radioactive.

On at least two occasion smugglers have been caught going through
rebellious Adzharia province in southern Georgian through the port of
Batumi on the Black Sea.

It is possible some of the material could have been smuggled to Iran
for its nuclear weapons programme or even to a terror organisation that
have yet been unable or unwilling to use it.

Armenians Take Over PURE

Vegas Eye, NV

Armenians Take Over PURE

08.16.2008

It was an explosive evening on Friday night as reality show siren Kim
Kardashian made a very special appearance at Sin City’s sexiest spot,
the Pussycat Dolls Lounge inside of PURE Nightclub. After rocking the
red carpet alongside her mother and sisters, Kris, Kourtney and Khloe
Kardashian, the brunette beauty transformed into a burlesque bombshell
as she geared up to perform with the Las Vegas Pussycat Dolls. As the
clock struck almost one A.M the lights dimmed, the anticipation
escalated inside the fan-filled lounge until the spotlight shone on
the reality starlet in a sparkling black, white and pink ensemble.
With a mic in one hand and a beach ball in the other, she welcomed the
crowd and explained that she was `feeling a bit dirty’ and in need of
a bath. The audience, along with her family and friends, then cheered
her on as she jumped into the lounge’s beautiful bath tub and
proceeded to splash around, alluring all with a seductive introduction
to the show. Later on after the Las Vegas Pussycat Dolls wowed the
packed house, Kim reemerged center stage in a sultry sailor outfit and
announced that it was `ladies’ night for the Kardashian clan. No
boyfriends, no brothers, no nothing!’ Kim thanked the crowd for
coming and gave a few shout outs to her `sexy’ siblings and mother
before joining her family and friends to catch the remainder of the
show. Afterwards, she returned to the stage where the creator of the
Pussycat Dolls phenomenon, Robin Antin, thanked her for taking the
time to join the troupe. The Kardashian bunch then headed into PURE
where they enjoyed two luxurious, white leather VIP booths adjacent to
the DJ Booth on the main stage. After changing into a beautiful blue
strapless dress, Kim immediately paid a visit to the DJ booth where
she got on the mic and said hello to the sea of partiers. She then
requested that DJ Hollywood play `Gimme More’ by Britney Spears and
began dancing with sister Kourtney. The gorgeous group of girls soaked
in the excitement of the superclub until they left just before 3am.
Also in the crowd was John Dolmayan best known as the drummer for the
Armenian-American alternative metal band System of a Down

Earlier in the night, Audrina Patridge spent an evening with good
friends and good food at chic eatery Social House. Seated outside on
the restaurant’s patio, The Hills hottie and her friends savored
assorted sushi rolls, kobe sliders and sake as they soaked in a
stunning view of The Strip.

South Ossetia and the Remaking of the Post-Soviet World

South Ossetia and the Remaking of the Post-Soviet World
An interview with Ronald Suny

ZNET

August, 16 2008

By Khatchig Mouradian
and Ronald Suny

Ronald Grigor Suny is professor of social and political history at the
University of Michigan and professor emeritus of political science and
history at the University of Chicago. He is the author of The Baku
Commune, 1917-1918: Class and Nationality in the Russian Revolution
(Princeton University Press, 1972); Armenia in the Twentieth Century
(Scholars Press, 1983); The Making of the Georgian Nation (Indiana
University Press, 1988, 1994); Looking Toward Ararat: Armenia in
Modern History (Indiana University Press, 1993); The Revenge of the
Past: Nationalism, Revolution, and the Collapse of the Soviet Union
(Stanford University Press, 1993); and The Soviet Experiment: Russia,
the USSR, and the Successor States (Oxford University Press, 1998).

Suny is currently working on a two-volume biography of Stalin for
Oxford University Press, a co-edited volume on the Armenian Genocide,
a series of essays on empire and nations, and studies of emotions and
ethnic politics. He has appeared numerous times on the McNeil-Lehrer
News Hour, CBS Evening News, CNN, and National Public Radio, and has
written for the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles
Times, the Nation, New Left Review, Dissent, and other newspapers and
journals.

In this interview, conducted by phone on Aug. 12, we talk about the
situation in the Caucasus after Georgia’s attack on South Ossetia and
Russia’s heavy-handed retaliation in August 2008.

***

Khatchig Mouradian – Talk about how the mainstream media in the
U.S. is covering the conflict between Russia and Georgia.

Ronald Suny – The mainstream media is completely off the wall. It’s
echoing the line of the president, the government, and the
presidential candidates. Also, in trying to make sense of the
conflict, the mainstream media is using frames like "Russian
imperialism" and "Russian aggression." These are old, cold-war era
frames that they are reproducing and the result is a complete
misreading of the situation.

After various developments in early 1990’s and by international
agreement, Russia took up the role of peacekeeper, separating the
Georgians from the Abkhaz and the Ossetians. It has kept its role
relatively responsibly and maintained peace in the area. Of course, it
is correct to say in some abstract way that Russia is not observing
the territorial integrity of Georgia or that Russia is attacking a
sovereign democratic country, but all this misses the whole point that
Russia has been involved in peacekeeping in those areas for years.

This particular crisis began with [Georgian president Mikhail]
Saakashvilli. He launched a rocket attack against Tskhinvali, the
capital of South Ossetia. The attack came at a very strategic point,
when Bush and Putin were in Beijing and [Russian president Dmitry]
Medvedev was on a cruise on the Volga. Important details such as these
are left out of many reports.

The mainstream media is talking about empire and imperialism. But what
Russia is practicing is, in fact, hegemony. It wants to dominate its
near abroad, just like the U.S. wants to dominate Latin America –
although the Americans also seek global hegemony.

The Russians want to preserve the status quo. They want to keep
Abkhazia and South Ossetia in a kind of frozen conflict
situation. That works for them. They can irritate Tbilisi, keep
Georgia from integrating fully with the West, and try to prevent it
from entering NATO. For the Russians, Georgia’s membership to the
military alliance spells disaster. Baltic countries, many Eastern
European countries, and Turkey are in NATO. If you add Georgia, the
entire western and southern borders Russia would be with NATO member
countries. This is unacceptable for a great power like Russia.

K.M. – How do you explain Russia’s response to Georgia’s attack on
South Ossetia?

R.S. – In the last 15 years, Russia has suffered humiliation after
humiliation. The breakup of the Soviet Union was not popular in
Russia, except among some liberals – and liberal in Russia means
right-winger, traitor. The U.S. had promised not to expand NATO to
Eastern Europe but has done it. In turn, the so-called "colored
revolutions" in Georgia, Ukraine, and Kyrgyzstan frightened the
Russians. They read these revolutions as Western interference,
artificial events conjured up by the West to push forward anti-Russian
elements like Saakashvili and [Ukranian president Victor]
Yushchenko. Then Kosovo gained independence despite Moscow’s
objections. After this colossal sense of humiliation, of a loss of
power, [former Russian president and current Prime Minister] Vladimir
Putin comes along, oil prices shoot up, and the Russians are making
money, the country is growing, and they begin to flex their muscles
again. If you listen to the Russian rhetoric now, it is about how
after years of humiliation, they are back and they are no longer going
to be pushed around.

K.M. – How far do you think Putin will go after this show of force?

R.S. – I think the Russians made their point. Confrontation is not
their first choice. They have too much going with the international
community to want to go back behind some kind of Iron Curtain. They
don’t want to be isolated.

K.M. – What do you think about the West’s response?

R.S. – I don’t think it’s an accident that [French president Nicolas]
Sarkozy, [German Chancellor Angela] Merkel, and other European leaders
and diplomats are flocking to Moscow and trying to resolve this
issue. The Europeans see Russia as a part of Europe. And they are not
taking as hard a line as the Bush Administration.

I have to note that the Bush Administration was very influenced by
[vice president Dick] Cheney. The first statement that President Bush
made was not particularly strong, but later, he and the government
adopted the Cheney line.

But the U.S. and NATO are powerless in this situation. They’re
obviously not going to go to war over South Ossetia. They don’t have
much maneuverability. Saakashvili started this, but it’s the Russians
that took it up and have improved their position.

The only thing that Saakashvili and the West can try to do now is
discredit Russia. They’re going to play that card, of course. They’re
going to make Russia look like the aggressor. And, of course, the
Russians play into this image. They brutalize. Why did they bomb the
Georgian city of Gori? They wanted to punish the Georgians. They
wanted to teach them a lesson. And I think they have. I predict that
Saakashvili’s days in power are numbered. What was he thinking? He’s a
very impetuous leader. People in Georgia are afraid of him because
they never know what to expect. He gambled and he lost this
gamble. When you don’t win a war that you initiate – as the Israeli
leaders have learned in Lebanon, and the U.S has learned in Iraq –
then you pay for it.

K.M. – What has changed in the equation after the war between Georgia
and Russia?

R.S. – Small as it seems to be, the tiny little place that few have
ever heard of – South Ossetia – in fact has changed the nature of the
post-Soviet world. Now countries have learned not to muck around with
the Russians. They have always been a hard country to bargain
with. Now they’re saying: if you push us hard enough, we’ll also use
military power. That’s a new dimension.

K.M. – Talk about the situation in South Ossetia and Abkhazia before
and after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

R.S. – In Soviet times, South Ossetia was an autonomous district and
Abkhazia was an autonomous Soviet republic. They had this official
autonomy, but in fact they were dominated completely by Georgia,
particularly during the Stalin period, when [Stalin’s secret police
boss Lavrenty] Beria was close to Stalin. Much resentment
developed. There was a kind of Georgianization that took place in
those regions.

When the Soviet Union began to disintegrate, a very radical
nationalist, Zviad Gamsakhurdia, was elected president in Georgia. He
declared "Georgia for the Georgians." They were going to have an
ethno-national republic, and the other peoples, who were 30 percent of
the population (hundreds of thousands of Armenians, Azerbaijanis,
Muslim Georgians, and, of course, Abkhazians and Ossetians), did not
figure in their vision. The Abkhazians and Ossetians rebelled and,
with Russian help, declared their autonomy and drove the Georgians
out. There are hundreds of thousands of Georgian refugees from those
areas now in Georgia. Roughly around 1993-94, around the time the
Russians were negotiating the armistice in Nagorno-Karabagh between
Armenia and Azerbaijan, they also negotiated a similar armistice in
Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

The Ossetians and Abkhazians want to be in Russia or
independent. Russia never wanted to annex them and bring them fully to
Russia because of the international law of territorial
integrity. Russia’s position is that you can’t alter borders without
mutual agreement. (In other words, they are against the independence
of Kosovo for good reason, because that would then justify Chechnya’s
revolt). The Russians have held that principle, but when the
U.S. backed Kosovo’s independence, Putin remarked that if Kosovo can
do it, why not Abkhazia and South Ossetia as well?

Unlike Karabagh, where Armenians were an overwhelming majority – they
were about 76 percent in 1989 when the conflict broke – in Abkhazia,
the Abkhaz were only 17 percent of the population and Georgians were
something like 43 percent. (By the way, according to most accounts,
the Armenians may be the largest ethnic group in Abkhazia today).

K.M. – In your book The Making of the Georgian Nation, you say, "If
there is any conclusion to be derived from such a study of the longue
duree of a small nation, it might be that a nation is never fully
`made.’ It is always in the process of being made." How do you think
the current conflict will affect the making of the Georgian nation?

R.S. – In their own discourse, the Georgians blame everything on
foreigners, the Russians, or minorities. They don’t recognize their
own responsibility for their own fate. Basically, in some ways, the
Georgian state committed suicide by this fierce policy both towards
Russia and its own minorities. The Georgians had to make a choice: do
they try to regain and solidify, consolidate Georgian national
territory with a hard militaristic confrontational policy that is
essentially anti-Russian, pro-West? Or do they try to negotiate, grant
concessions, offer high degrees of autonomy to Abkhazia and South
Ossetia, and also try a more cooperative approach towards Russia?
Georgia has alternated between these choices. The problem is, they
don’t get much from the cooperative approach and they get frustrated
with that.

Saakashvili has taken a harder line. He’s figuring, "I can put Russia
in a very difficult position. I can use the West and maybe that kind
of pressure will both force Russia to come to some kind of agreement
with me and also help me get into NATO." That was his gamble.

K.M. – Georgia’s neighbor, Azerbaijan, welcomed Tbilisi’s move to
regain control of South Ossetia and signaled the possibility of a
similar action against its own breakaway republic of
Nagorno-Karabagh. Do you think Azerbaijani officials will act on their
war talk?

R.S. – Russia’s actions are changing things. Had Saakashvili
succeeded, then Azerbaijan would have been more encouraged to try to
do something in Karabakh on its own. If I were Azerbaijan, I’d be very
wary. The events in Georgia have shaken things up. Russia is once
again the major player in the South Caucasus, and it considers Armenia
to be its closest ally in the region.

Khatchig Mouradian is a journalist, writer and translator, currently
based in Boston. He is the editor of the Armenian Weekly. He can be
contacted at: [email protected].

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.