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Why Russia Is Extending An Olive Branch To Tbilisi And Other Restive

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  • Why Russia Is Extending An Olive Branch To Tbilisi And Other Restive

    WHY RUSSIA IS EXTENDING AN OLIVE BRANCH TO TBILISI AND OTHER RESTIVE REGIONS.

    Newsweek
    April 16 2010

    Peace Breaks Out in Georgia

    Moscow and Tbilisi are still officially at war a year and a half
    after Russian troops rolled into the breakaway Georgian republics of
    South Ossetia and Abkhazia and declared them independent. But quietly,
    with minimal fanfare on both sides, peace is breaking out. A crucial
    border crossing reopened last month, direct flights have recommenced,
    and Russians have begun issuing more visas to Georgian nationals.

    The reason for this sudden warming of relations? In large part, the
    Olympic spirit of peace--or at least Russia's fervent desire to make
    the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi a trouble-free success. With the
    Olympic banner now passed from Canada to Russia, the Kremlin wants
    to do everything possible to ensure that there won't be any more
    flare-ups over Abkhazia, just 25 miles away from Sochi.

    That means soothing differences with Georgia and giving Tbilisi an
    economic stake in keeping the peace by allowing cross-border trade,
    once a mainstay of the Georgian economy. Opening the border also
    helps Russia's main Caucasian ally, Armenia, whose only road access to
    Russia is via Georgia and which found itself also blockaded by default.

    Yerevan has been begging Moscow to open the Georgian road, as the
    prospects of an opening of the Armenian-Turkish border are receding
    despite an agreement reached last year. At present, landlocked Armenia
    can trade only with two of its four neighbors, Iran and Georgia, with
    the borders closed to Turkey and Azerbaijan since 1992. Turkey has
    dialed back on its commitment to open the border in part because of a
    U.S. congressional Foreign Affairs Committee resolution recognizing
    the Armenian genocide, as well as pressure from Azerbaijan, which
    wants an Armenian withdrawal from the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    But of more immediate concern to Moscow is the prospect of
    terror attacks from the North Caucasus, which is also in Sochi's
    neighborhood. Last week the International Olympic Committee expressed
    confidence that Russia would be able to make the games secure, and
    on Monday Prime Minister Vladimir Putin formed a security committee
    to oversee preparations for Sochi's Olympics. This week the chief of
    Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) announced that it had arrested
    or killed 170 militants in the region this year, and had identified
    the masterminds of the recent suicide bombings on the Moscow metro
    and in Dagestan.

    But to really ensure a peaceful Olympics, President Dmitry Medvedev
    will have to do a lot more than let Russian security forces continue
    business as usual in the Moscow-controlled North Caucasus, arresting
    and murdering suspects at will. Medvedev's challenge is not only
    to pacify his empire's most restive corner but the whole explosive
    neighborhood as well. Making a quiet peace with Georgia is one
    important step toward that goal.
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