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Georgia: Tbilisi Ups The Ante Over South Ossetia

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  • Georgia: Tbilisi Ups The Ante Over South Ossetia

    Thursday, March 29, 2007

    Georgia: Tbilisi Ups The Ante Over South Ossetia

    By Liz Fuller



    March 29, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- The Georgian leadership has announced at
    least three successive proposals since September 2004 for resolving
    its conflictwith the breakaway unrecognized republic of South Ossetia.

    All have been rejected.



    Now, Tbilisi is seeking the backing of the international community to
    establish a pro-Georgian interim administration in South Ossetia in a
    bid to sideline the de facto administration of Eduard Kokoity, the
    republican president whom Tbilisi regards as a Russian puppet.

    Frozen Approach

    Meanwhile, the EU was scheduled on March 27 to discuss a new plan that
    advocates diverging approaches to expediting a solution to the frozen
    conflicts in both South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

    Under former President Eduard Shevardnadze, the Georgian leadership
    concentrated its energy on seeking, first through Russian mediation
    and then with the assistance of the so-called Friends of the UN
    Secretary-General group of countries (France, Germany, the United
    Kingdom, the United States, and Russia) a solution of the Abkhaz
    conflict that would enable the estimated 200,000 or more Georgians who
    fled the region during the 1992-93 fighting to return to their homes.

    The conflict with South Ossetia, by contrast, was kept on the back
    burner. After the Rose Revolution in November 2003 and the ouster six
    months laterof Aslan Abashidze, the autocratic ruler of Ajara,
    however, Tbilisi began focusing in earnest on South Ossetia.

    An attempt in the summer of 2004 to bring the region back under
    Tbilisi's control by force of arms backfired badly, costing the lives
    of several dozen Georgian Interior Ministry troops and precipitating
    the dismissal of Interior Minister Irakli Okruashvili, himself a
    native of the South Ossetian capital, Tskhinvali.

    Addressing the UN General Assembly on September 21, 2004, just weeks
    after the botched Georgian military intervention, President Mikheil
    Saakashvili outlined a three-stage plan for resolving the twin
    conflicts in Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

    That plan entailed confidence-building measures; the demilitarization
    of the conflict zones -- to be followed by OSCE monitoring of the Roki
    tunnel linking South Ossetia and Russia, and the deployment of UN
    observers alongthe border between Abkhazia and Russia; and the
    granting to the two regions of"the fullest and broadest form of
    autonomy." This, according to Saakashvili, would protect the Abkhaz
    and Ossetian languages and cultures, and guarantee self governance,
    fiscal control, and "meaningful representation and power-sharing" at
    the national level. Both unrecognized republics rejected that offer
    outof hand.

    Four months later, in January 2005, President Saakashvili unveiled a
    revised and expanded peace plan for South Ossetia during an address to
    the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. The full text of
    Saakashvili's plan was posted on his website
    (http://www.president.gov.ge) in late March 2005.

    It comprised "a constitutional guarantee of autonomy, which includes
    the right to freely and directly elected local self governance -
    including an executive branch and a parliament for South
    Ossetia. South Ossetia=80=99s parliament will...control...issues such
    as culture, education, social policy, economic policy, public order,
    the organization of local self governance, and environmental
    protection."

    South Ossetia would also, Saakashvili said, have representatives in
    the national government, parliament, and judiciary. He further said
    Tbilisi was ready to discuss with the South Ossetian leadership
    "innovative ideas," including free economic zones, and to permit that
    leadership to tailor its economic policies to local needs.

    Transition Period

    Saakashvili proposed a three-year transition period during which a
    mixed Georgian-Ossetian police force would be set up under the
    guidance of international organizations, and the South Ossetian
    military would be absorbed into the Georgian armed forces.

    He appealed to the OSCE, the Council of Europe, the European Union,
    the United States, and Russia to support and facilitate the peace
    process. But Kokoity again dismissed Saakashvili's offer. Kokoity said
    he was ready for dialogue with Tbilisi "on equal terms," and to expand
    economic cooperation with Georgia, but he added that South Ossetia
    does not need Georgian humanitarian aid.

    Saakashvili's refloated the revised version of his original peace
    proposal at a conference in Batumi in July 2005 on conflict resolution
    to which Kokoity claimed he was not invited.

    Then, in October 2005, Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Noghaideli
    outlined to the OSCE Permanent Council in Vienna yet another rewrite
    of Saakashvili's peace proposal.

    Just how it differed from earlier drafts is not clear, but Russian
    Foreign Minister spokesman Mikhail Kamynin criticized it as inferior
    to the proposal that Saakashvili unveiled to the UN General Assembly
    in September 2004.

    Kokoity responded in December 2005 by floating a three-stage peace
    proposal of his own, which the Georgian authorities initially
    lauded. But efforts to convene a meeting between Kokoity and
    Noghaideli to discuss details failed.

    Meanwhile, Georgia launched a parallel two-track campaign to have the
    Russian peacekeeping contingent deployed in the South Ossetian
    conflict zone withdrawn, and to bring U.S. and EU representatives into
    the ongoing talkson resolving the conflict conducted under the
    auspices of the Joint Control Commission (JCC).

    That body comprises government representatives from Russia, Georgia,
    South Ossetia, and the Republic of North Ossetia, which is a subject
    of the Russian Federation. OSCE representatives also regularly attend
    JCC meetings.

    Dueling Elections

    No progress was registered toward resolving the conflict in 2006. In
    November 2006, Kokoity was reelected for a second term as de facto
    president with 96 percent of the vote.

    The same day, however, the Georgian electorate of South Ossetia
    participated in a parallel ballot in which they elected their own de
    facto president, Dmitry Sanakoyev. Sanakoyev served as defense
    minister and then as prime minister for several months in 2001 under
    Kokoity's predecessor, Lyudvig Chibirov, but left South Ossetia for
    Moscow after Kokoity came to power.

    The international community did not acknowledge the election of either
    Kokoity or Sanakoyev as legal and valid. But that did not deter
    Saakashvili from announcing in his annual address to parliament in
    mid-March that he intends to embark on "peace talks" with Sanakoyev,
    who has established a parallel government based in the village of
    Kurta.

    The pro-Saakashvili Rustavi-2 television channel on March 26 quoted
    Saakashvili as saying he plans to set up a "temporary administrative
    unit"in South Ossetia that would oversee the economy and social
    services, help maintain law and order, and participate in talks on the
    region's future status within Georgia.

    If those talks reach a conclusion, Saakashvili continued, "real
    elections" will be held throughout South Ossetia. He added that within
    days, the Georgian government will ask parliament to draft the
    appropriate legislation on the temporary government.

    In an interview published on March 26 in "The Georgian Times,"
    Sanakoyev outlined his own vision of South Ossetia's future. He
    reaffirmed his commitment to resolving the conflict peacefully, but at
    the same time said Kokoity has no options other than resigning or risk
    being deposed.

    Alternative Choice

    Sanakoyev admitted that neither he nor the administration he heads is
    regarded as legitimate, but said he thinks that will change given that
    "wehave managed to create an alternative to the Kokoity authorities
    who are leading the Ossetian people into an abyss."

    He said his administration hopes for economic ties with Russia,
    especially neighboring North Ossetia, and that "we are going to
    develop our economy onthe basis of raw materials" in light of the
    region's untapped hydroelectric capacity.

    In one key respect, however, Sanakoyev's plans appear to diverge from,
    and go far beyond, what Tbilisi is offering: he said he wants "federal
    relations," which Tbilisi has consistently rejected in the case of
    both South Ossetia and Abkhazia. (The Georgian Constitution defines
    Georgia as "an independent, unified, and indivisible state.")

    And, while Sanakoyev expressed "understanding" for Tbilisi's
    unhappiness with the JCC as a format for talks, he said he still
    believes that commission "has great potential for [promoting]
    reconciliation and disarmament."

    Meanwhile in Brussels, Ambassador Peter Semneby, the EU's special
    representative for the South Caucasus, has overseen the drafting of a
    landmark 60-page blueprint for resolving both the Abkhaz and South
    Ossetian conflicts. T

    hat plan advocates diverging approaches to the two regions, in tacit
    acknowledgment of the very real differences between the leaders of
    South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

    While the former are widely regarded by international diplomats and
    experts as opportunistic, entirely subservient to Moscow, and mired in
    dubious, possibly even criminal economic activities, the latter are
    seen as politically sophisticated and desperately seeking the backing
    of the international community to lessen their dependence on Moscow --
    currently their sole ally -- and broaden their leeway in ongoing
    UN-mediated talks with Tbilisi.

    In line with that perception, what RFE/RL's Georgian Service on March
    22 dubbed the "Semneby plan" seeks to persuade the Abkhaz of the
    economic and social benefits of reaching an accommodation with
    Tbilisi.

    It also envisages establishing new customs structures to put an end to
    smuggling across the borders of both republics and, in South Ossetia,
    policing the porous border with North Ossetia to preclude the shipment
    of Russian weaponry to the South Ossetian military, according to a
    March 20 analysis on euobserver.com.
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