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Doing unto Others: The Price of the Question

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  • Doing unto Others: The Price of the Question

    Kommersant, Russia
    Jan 28 2005

    Doing unto Others: The Price of the Question


    World Practice


    There have been too many coincidences to think that it is accidental.
    Mikhail Saakashvili is making the rounds in Strasbourg with new peace
    proposals for South Ossetia and Abkhazia, and what do you know?, at
    the very same time the leaders of the two unrecognized states, Eduard
    Kokoity and Sergey Bagapsh, turn up in Moscow and shriek in chorus
    that the peace proposals are practically a declaration of war and
    hitting him on both fronts at once. The next day, the UN Security
    Council discusses Abkhazia on Moscow's initiative and without any
    representation from Georgia. It becomes clear that Russia sees no
    reason for the Georgian ambassador to be present at discussions of
    the Abkhazian problem. But you have to think that the problem has a
    little to do with Georgia too.

    Bagapsh, leader of sunny Abkhazia, has declared how happy he is to
    have met Kokoity in snowy Moscow and that he intends to `coordinate
    actions' with the presidents of unrecognized Transdniestr Republic
    and Nagorny Karabakh. Very touching, of course.

    We have already forgotten our righteous anger over the intriguing of
    outside forces in Ukraine. And it didn't stop us from thinking that
    our own actions were only for the sake of greater stability in
    Ukraine, Georgia, Moldova, Azerbaijan and everywhere else. We know
    best, of course, what the former Soviet republics and their citizens
    really need. They couldn't cope without us. We are a great power and
    they are our buffer zone and underbelly. The present Russian-Georgian
    collision has dispelled any doubts. The linchpin of Moscow's position
    among the former Soviet countries will be Abkhazia, South Ossetia
    and, unseen, Transdniestr, Eastern Ukraine and area in similar
    circumstances. It sounds scary, but it seems to be what's happening.
    We don't have any other ways of keeping the West away yet. At least
    in those places we still pull some weight. We have our own people. We
    lost Aslan Abashidze in Ajaria, but there's still Kokoity and
    Bagapsh/Khadzjimba and Igor Smirnov in Transdniestr. We can give
    Arkady Gukasyan in Karabakh a go if need be to. And there's still
    Viktor Yanukovich. He's not finished yet and is putting gout signals
    that he could use a hand - a sure sign of life.

    It would seem that it is a no-lose, irrefutable position. But we have
    to be morally prepared for to pay the high price of having our own
    weapons used against us. They'll use our experience and know-how.
    There are lots more places to do it in. Just the North Caucasus, with
    its eternal reputation as a tinderbox, is enough. Then we'll remember
    the old truth that people who live in glass houses shouldn't throw
    stones.

    by Sergey Strokan
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