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The Geopolitical Whirlpool Of The Caucasus

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  • The Geopolitical Whirlpool Of The Caucasus

    THE GEOPOLITICAL WHIRLPOOL OF THE CAUCASUS
    by Oleg Gorupai, translated by Elena Leonova

    Source: Krasnaya Zvezda
    October 8, 2007 Monday
    Russia

    HIGHLIGHT: Russia and the South Caucasus: resisting the West's
    encroachment; Ensuring security in the Russian Caucasus is
    inconceivable without, and inseparable from, stability in Georgia,
    Armenia, and Azerbaijan. This is precisely why Russia has taken on
    the burden of geopolitical leadership in the South Caucasus ever
    since the break-up of the USSR.

    The South Caucasus never ceases to surprise the international
    community, keeping it on its toes with intermittent bursts of
    adrenaline. The latest events in Georgia; regular declarations
    from Azeri politicians about possibly using force to sort out
    the Nagorno-Karabakh problem; Armenia's emphasis on enhancing its
    defence capacities - all this certainly indicates that the region's
    military-political situation is complicated and deteriorating. The
    militarization of the Caucasus has reached a critical peak. The
    combined military budget of these three Trans-Caucasus countries now
    amounts to over $1.5 billion a year!

    According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
    (SIPRI) and the London Institue for War and Peace, the military budgets
    of Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Georgia are growing steadily: faster than
    defense spending in most other countries, and much faster than their
    GDP growth rates (up to 40 times faster). As at mid-2007, Georgia's
    military budget for this year was $303 million, Armenia's was $264
    million, and Azerbaijan's was over $900 million. There are 75 tanks
    and 85 artillery pieces per million residents of the South Caucasus:
    higher than the equivalent figures for Turkey or Iran. The present-day
    Caucasus has become one of the world's most militarized regions. The
    independent states of the South Caucasus possess military arsenals
    comparable to those of the average European country. The Armed Forces
    of Azerbaijan have 70,000 personnel, the Armenian Armed Forces have
    45,000, and Georgia's troop strength in 2006 peaked at 31,878.

    Aside from the military arsenals of these three
    internationally-recognized states, there are also the military
    machines of three unrecognized formations - entirely comparable to
    those of the recognized states. The Armed Forces of Abkhazia have
    5,000 personnel, and South Ossetia has 3,000. In terms of firepower,
    the armed forces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia are practically equal to
    Georgia. Georgia has 80-100 tanks; Abkhazia has 100 and South Ossetia
    has 87. Heavy artillery numbers (over 122 millimeters) are 117, 237,
    and 95 respectively.

    The Georgian government has almost doubled defense spending for 2007
    recently: from 513 million lari ($303 million) to 957 million lari
    ($566 million); in late September, the Georgian parliament approved
    the government's proposal for a substantial increase (over 25%)
    in the military budget for 2008. Tbilisi's military spending will
    rise to $723 million next year. The Georgian government has noted
    that among the reasons for the additional spending is the aim of
    accelerating military reforms required for Georgia to join NATO.

    Azerbaijan's military budget has grown from $146 million in 2004 to
    almost $1 billion this year. Armenia's defense spending has increased
    by 350% as compared to 2000 (Armenia allocated almost $150 million
    for defense in 2006 and almost $264 million this year); Azerbaijan's
    defense spending has risen eight-fold; Georgia's defense spending has
    risen ten-fold (at the start of 2006, it was only $77 million). It's
    worth noting that the Trans-Caucasus countries have seen a surge in
    military spending in the course of 2006 and 2007.

    These facts are inevitably a source of concern for Russia and
    its partners in the CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization
    (CSTO), especially given the obvious imbalance of forces among the
    Trans-Caucasus states (Armenia looks very modest compared to its
    neighbors). The situation developing within the CSTO's activity zone
    was considered at a meeting of the CSTO secretaries in mid-September.

    After the meeting, CSTO Secretary-General Nikolai Bordyuzha noted
    that the meeting also considered "the militant statements made by
    representatives of certain states, indicating a wish to resolve some
    frozen conflicts by military means, along with escalating military
    activity and the growing military budgets and troop strength in
    Georgia and Azerbaijan." As Bordyuzha pointed out, all this could
    become a factor of "instability and threats for CSTO member states."

    Clearly, the region is witnessing a dangerous increase of activity.

    Governments, defense ministries, and analysts all over the world are
    paying closer attention to this region. The main reason for that is
    Washington's persistent policy course of destabilizing the situation
    in the Middle East and the South Caucasus. With the Iran crisis highly
    likely to escalate into an armed conflict, the Trans-Caucasus would
    be in dangerous proximity to the theater of war. Most importantly,
    the architects of global politics regard the Iran problem as leverage
    for far-reaching long-term transformations in the so-called Greater
    Middle East: in effect, the Americanization of this region. In their
    view, the South Caucasus should not be an obstacle to these plans
    (at least); it might even facilitate them (at most).

    Washington will not abandon its plans to restructure the Caucasus.

    The chief objectives of the United States and its NATO allies remain
    unchanged: integrating the three Trans-Caucasus states into the
    Euro-Atlantic community, and expelling Russia from the region.

    However, European Union membership for the South Caucasus countries
    isn't even a hypothetical possibility; the chief instrument for their
    Euro-Atlantic integration is supposed to be the NATO military bloc.

    In Washington's view, the Caucasus should be the next stage in NATO
    expansion - and the best possible option is believed to be simultaneous
    accession to NATO for Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Georgia.

    At NATO's Istanbul summit in 204, the South Caucasus region was
    included among NATO's priority zones. NATO's cooperation with
    countries in this region is based on Individual Partnership Action
    Plans (IPAPs). In 2004, the Armenian prime minister established an
    inter-departmental commission for coordinating the implementation
    of Armenia's IPAP with NATO. Georgia's IPAP was adopted in 2003;
    Azerbaijan's IPAP was adopted in May 2005. The United States is
    using political and financial support for countries in this region to
    restrict Russia's role and gradually push Russia out of the Caucasus.

    Over the past 12 years, the Americans have provided around $1.3
    billion worth of aid to Georgia - including military aid. According
    to Jane's Sentinel Security Assessment for Russia and the CIS,
    the Americans spent $64 million on the Train and Equip program in
    2002-04. Georgia received a total of $98 million in US military
    aid during that time. That sum raised Georgia to 20th place in the
    ranking of Washington's foreign partners. In the previous three
    years, Georgia had received only $18 million from the United States,
    ranking 41st among US aid recipients. These figures are taken from the
    "Collateral Damage" report released by the Center for Public Integrity,
    based on a year of investigative journalism. Another American program,
    Georgia Sustainment and Stability Operations (under way since 2005),
    has cost $60 million. Moreover, the United States is also providing
    aid under the Foreign Military Financing (FMF) and International
    Military Education and Training (IMET) programs. In 2005, the FMF and
    IMET programs provided Georgia with $11.9 million and $1.4 million
    respectively (funding is supposed to be maintained at 2005 levels in
    2006 and 2007). Washington provided Georgia with a total of around
    $74 million in military aid in 2005: more than double the American
    funding Georgia received in 2004 ($30 million).

    The Pentagon is also intensively arming Azerbaijan. This is indicated
    in a report from the Center for Defense Information: Baku has received
    $14 million worth of arms from the United States in recent years. "The
    United States uses arms sales as a reward for its allies in the war on
    terror," says the report. It also notes that Azerbaijan has received
    over $27 million in military aid from Washington in the past five
    years. The US budget for 2007 and 2008 includes further military aid
    and arms sales to Azerbaijan. The draft budget presented to Congress
    by the White House proposes to allocate $5.3 million worth of military
    aid to Azerbaijan.

    Washington isn't neglecting Armenia either. On August 1, the United
    States presented the Armenian Defense Ministry's peacekeeping battalion
    with $3 million worth of arms and equipment. This was provided as
    part of the FMF program. The program intends to provide $8 million
    by 2009 for the purpose of establishing an Armenian peacekeeping
    battalion that will cooperate with NATO. The draft budget presented
    to Congress by the White House proposes to allocate $3.3 million
    worth of military aid to Armenia.

    As we can see, US policy in this region is facilitating its
    militarization. Washington has developed and is implementing projects
    intended to weaken Russia's influence in the Caucasus as much as
    possible - in economic, political, and military terms. And the GUAM
    alliance (Georgia-Ukraine-Azerbaijan-Moldova) is being strengthened
    as an alternative to Russian influence. There have also been reports
    of an Azerbaijan-Turkey-Georgia military bloc being formed.

    The fundamental changes in the regional balance of power could become
    irreversible if the South Caucasus countries are integrated into NATO,
    as a "more effective" security system. NATO Secretary-General Jaap de
    Hoop Scheffer visited Tbilisi recently, meeting with Georgian leaders
    to discuss the prospects for Georgia's accession to NATO (Georgia
    hopes to initiate a NATO membership program in spring of 2008).

    What's more, if US plans to install missile defense elements in the
    Caucasus go ahead, the Trans-Caucasus will end up on the front line -
    and thus in a high risk zone.

    >From the very outset of its existence as an independent state, Russia
    has designated the South Caucasus as a strategic interests priority
    zone. Whoever controls the Trans-Caucasus also controls the Caspian Sea
    and access to Central Asia and the Middle East. From this standpoint,
    the region is important for Russia's strategic interests.

    One of Moscow's most important objectives is to restrain negative
    developments in the South Caucasus, no matter how hard the
    "international community" may try to push Russia out of this region.

    Russian dominance in the South Caucasus is not a question of Russia
    "reviving imperialism." Ensuring stability in the Trans-Caucasus
    countries is a fundamental precondition for peaceful development
    within Russia itself: maintaining Russia's territorial integrity.

    Russia is a Caucasus state. This assertion is not just a pretty
    metaphor. Seven regions of the Russian Federation (Adygea, Ingushetia,
    Dagestan, Kabardino-Balkaria, Karachaevo-Cherkesia, North Ossetia,
    Chechnya) are located in the North Caucasus, and four more regions
    are on the steppes adjacent to the Caucasus (Krasnodar and Stavropol
    territories, the Rostov region, Kalmykia). The Black Sea coast of
    the Krasnodar territory and the area around Mineralnye Vody in the
    Stavropol territory are part of the Caucasus. Ensuring security in
    the Russian Caucasus is inconceivable without, and inseparable from,
    stability in Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan. This is precisely
    why Russia has taken on the burden of geopolitical leadership in the
    South Caucasus ever since the break-up of the USSR.

    Hence Russia's intense interest in events around Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia. Stabilizing the situation in these territories is in line
    with Russia's national interests.

    Our immediate neighbors in the region have repeatedly expressed
    the opinion that Moscow has no strictly-defined and coordinated
    policy on the Trans-Caucasus; they are still saying this. Indeed,
    Russia itself wasn't in the best situation back in the 1990s; it
    was incapable of pursuing a coherent policy in relation to Armenia,
    Azerbaijan, and Georgia.

    The results of this have been perceptible: Georgia is looking to
    Brussels and Washington these days, while Azerbaijan is looking to
    Brussels, Washington, and Ankara. Armenia, on the other hand, is
    far more inclined to take Russia's regional interests into account,
    and values its relations with Russia. Thus, Moscow's policy in the
    Trans-Caucasus should by no means be regarded as a complete failure.

    While Georgia considers that it has unarguable reasons for joining
    NATO, Armenia has every reason to waver. Armenia doesn't see any
    particular advantage for itself in the prospect of NATO gaining
    control of the region; in fact, it has justifiable apprehensions
    that this could have a harmful impact on Armenian interests. Armenia
    remains Russia's real strategic partner in the South Caucasus. It is
    basing its foreign policy on the principle of maintaining equilibrium
    between the various military-political blocs whose interests directly
    concern the Caucasus region. This policy is what best suits the state
    interests of Armenia at the present stage.

    Russia's relations with Azerbaijan have also improved. On a visit
    to Baku in spring of 2007, Federation Council Speaker Sergei
    Mironov said that although some analysts have reported a recent
    "chill" in Russian-Azeri relations, such opinions "should remain
    on the conscience of the analysts themselves." In Mironov's view,
    Russian-Azeri strategic partnership is growing: in economic affairs,
    humanitarian issues, and many other areas of bilateral cooperation.

    Mironov said: "This has been confirmed for all to see by the
    successful Year of Russia in Azerbaijan and the Year of Azerbaijan
    in Russia, which became a convincing demonstration of Russian-Azeri
    friendship. There is also striking evidence in the fact that bilateral
    trade grew by 50% between 2005 and 2006, and now stands at over
    $1.6 billion."

    Of course, skeptics might object that wishful thinking should not
    be portrayed as reality. But the growing influence of Russia in the
    Caucasus and worldwide is being acknowledged in the West as well. A
    group of American analysts involved in the Global Power Barometer
    project concluded recently that "US influence is in steep decline...

    other players such as Russia... are stepping into the vacuum. The US
    is... already sharing the global influence stage with emerging powers
    who can move global events as well or better."

    If Russia's policy in the South Caucasus continues to take a pragmatic
    tone, then (given the factors of geographical proximity and cultural,
    technological, and human links) Moscow's presence and influence in
    the South Caucasus will make it possible to prevent the region's
    militarization and solve all the most urgent regional problems,
    including territorial problems.
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