Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Georgian-Russian Crisis And The Western Perspective

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Georgian-Russian Crisis And The Western Perspective

    GEORGIAN-RUSSIAN CRISIS AND THE WESTERN PERSPECTIVE
    By David Batashvili

    Abkhazia Institute for social & economic research, CA
    Nov 2 2007

    On October 30, 2007 a Georgian-Russian armed confrontation was narrowly
    avoided in the village of Ganmukhuri in Western Georgia.

    Dozens of heavily armed men were kicking and pushing each other,
    occasionally firing in the air. While bloody encounter luckily did
    not occur, political tensions have reached their peak as a result of
    the incident.

    Ganmukhuri is a village situated on the very frontier of the territory
    controlled by the Abkhazian rebels who enjoy support of Kremlin and
    the Russian troops stationed in the area. Despite its geographical
    location, Ganmukhuri was a site of a Georgian youth camp in the summer
    of 2007. On October 30 Russian soldiers approached the empty camp,
    encountered the five Georgian policemen that were guarding it, bullied
    them, and took as prisoners, severely beating them in the process. In
    less than an hour Georgian Special Forces and police arrived at the
    spot and the stand off began. It appeared to be so serious that the
    president of Georgia Michael Saakashvili decided to go to Ganmukhuri
    and establish control over the situation personally. Subsequently
    the Russians freed Georgian policemen and left the scene.

    This was not an isolated incident, but rather a logical development
    of the political situation that currently exists in the region of
    Caucasus. One of the key components of this situation is an amounting
    Russian pressure on Georgia. On March 11 2007 Russian helicopters
    bombed the Georgia-controlled Kodori gorge in Abkhazia.

    On August 6 Russian plane dropped a rocket in the Georgian-controlled
    part of another rebellious region of the country - South Ossetia. A
    more than one year-old Russian embargo against Georgia, which includes
    cutting all sorts of economic ties, trade, and transportation
    either by land or air, has already become a mere fact of life for
    Georgia. Russian pressure is not new for this country.

    The incident of October 30, however, has come too close to a direct
    military confrontation. It has proved that Russia is unpredictable
    and its direct aggression against Georgia is not totally unlikely,
    to say the least.

    What is position of the West in these circumstances? Existing
    experience demonstrates that usually the Western countries do their
    best not to emphasize Russia's aggressive actions towards Georgia. As
    a result, Russian activity of this sort is steadily increasing. This
    Western policy of appeasement towards Russia is counter-productive from
    various points of view. It only increases the risk of destabilization
    in the Eastern Europe, which would create very serious problems for
    the Western Europe. The Western Europeans had a good opportunity to
    understand this when they experienced interruptions of the natural gas
    supply during the Russian-Ukrainian crisis in January of 2006. That
    was a mere symptom of the troubles that may occur if Russian bullying
    towards its neighbors is further tolerated.

    Georgia is a strategically vital country if the stable transport
    route between Europe and Central and Eastern Asia is ever to be
    established. This route cannot go through the Russian region of North
    Caucasus, ravaged by the guerilla war. Iran also cannot be considered
    to be a stable territory for such a route to go through. With the
    Armenia-Turkey and the Armenia-Azerbaijan borders closed, Georgian
    territory seems to be the only possible route for the European-Asian
    transportation, including the potential direct European access to
    the vast natural gas reserves of the Central Asian countries. It
    is not reasonable to let Russia - largely a monopolist gas supplier
    to Europe - destabilize Georgia, which is essential for the direct
    natural gas supply from Central Asia that would seriously lessen
    European dependence on Russian gas.

    There are still other reasons for the Western countries to pay more
    attention to the Russian aggression towards Georgia. Europe has an
    extremely bitter experience of leaving small democracies alone to face
    aggression of the tyrannies. Turning the blind eye and appeasement
    of Russia can bring only an increased danger of destabilization and
    violence in the Eastern Europe, since such a policy gives Kremlin
    an impression that even their most violent actions will not result
    in strong reactions from the Western countries. If so, Kremlin
    may not see any reason to abstain from aggression. Western silence
    provokes Kremlin to become further less democratic inside Russia, to
    strengthen its Cold War style rhetoric, and to continue its aggressive
    actions towards Georgia and other neighbors (like Ukraine) which can
    potentially result in an armed conflict, as the Ganmukhuri incident
    has demonstrated in a very obvious way.

    Most of the Western countries do not seem likely to change their
    policy of not opposing Russia in its political, diplomatic and
    economic attacks on its neighbors. This may create an impression that
    Russian military attack will be tolerated in just the same way. This
    impression, in turn, would dramatically increase the chances of
    such an attack to occur. There is a hope that Russian policy towards
    its neighbors will not result in the catastrophic consequences, but
    considering the current Western attitude, such a hope does not have
    a sound logical base.

    http://www.abkhazia.com/content/view/1018/6 4/
Working...
X