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New York Law To Russian Claw

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  • New York Law To Russian Claw

    NEW YORK LAW TO RUSSIAN CLAW
    by Kit R. Roane

    Conde Nast Portfolio
    Aug 15 2008
    NY

    The idealism and ambitions of Georgia's embattled leader were shaped
    in Manhattan.

    More than a decade before he became Georgia's president, Mikheil
    Saakashvili was just another struggling law student with big plans
    tooling around Manhattan on his bicycle.

    "He was ambitious, idealistic, and I think he had something of the
    American messianic sense that you could use law to change the world,"
    recalls professor Lori Damrosch, who taught Saakashvili in a Columbia
    law seminar entitled International Institutions in Transition.

    "This was at a time of turmoil in the ex-Soviet republics, and he
    had a lot to say on those topics," she adds, noting that students
    at the law school were "imbued with this idealistic spirit" and that
    Saakashvili "absorbed these values."

    With his country now bloodied after a clash with Russia and his
    leadership questioned, the overarching idealism of his New York
    student days would seem to have been finally shaken.

    Critics have certainly come out of the woodwork, saying that the loss
    of Georgia's breakaway regions, particularly that of South Ossetia,
    would foment protest to Saakashvili's rule. Italy's foreign minister,
    Franco Frattini, has said that the war brought on by Saakashvili's
    futile and perhaps rash attempt to secure the areas "pushed Georgia
    further away not just from Europe, but also complicates the NATO
    council in December." And Michael Evans, defense editor for the Times
    of London, noted that Saakashvili's "military adventure had all the
    hallmarks of rushed planning and a finger-crossed strategy," adding
    that the Georgian president gave Vladimir Putin "the opportunity he
    was waiting for to stamp his authority over Georgia and at the same
    time to cock a snoot at the West."

    So far, Saakashvili has not wavered. He continues to hammer out a
    drumbeat of statements aimed at presenting himself as the biblical
    David, Russia as the corrupt Goliath intent upon creating a new iron
    curtain, and Georgia as the thin edge of the wedge.

    "Let us be frank: This conflict is about the future of freedom in
    Europe," he wrote in the Wall Street Journal.

    He has failed to persuade the West to send in reinforcements. With
    Russia still marching into new cities, the best news that Georgia could
    muster so far this week was word that its Olympic beach volleyball
    team had trounced the Russians in two out of three rounds.

    Saakashvili would have likely modeled for a more robust response
    from the West. Well studied in the intricate dance among nations,
    he wrote a seminar paper on humanitarian intervention, which focused
    on ethnic conflicts in the former Soviet satellite states.

    Unlike many other 1994 graduates of Columbia Law School, Saakashvili
    put his training to the test on the world stage.

    By 1996, Saakashvili, who idolizes John F. Kennedy and leans
    politically toward John McCain, had already jettisoned a doctoral
    thesis at George Washington University Law School, quit the high-power
    law firm of Patterson Belknap and won a parliamentary seat in the
    Republic of Georgia (population 4.4 million).

    This was the first of many leaps that would, in a short and
    bloodless coup, move Saakashvili into the presidency, an ascendancy
    that Saakashvili has said was helped along by the knowledge that he
    acquired while a law student in the United States

    "He clearly knew what he wanted when he was at Columbia, and he chose
    his courses very carefully and in a conscious way that didn't follow
    the usual diet, which is corporate and securities law," says professor
    George Bermann, who taught Saakashvili courses in European Union law,
    and transnational litigation and arbitration.

    Despite Georgia's setbacks, no one should count Saakashvili out just
    yet. He has spent the last decade and a half proving that idealism
    in the most adept hands can be a strong bulwark against even the
    strongest and most depressing reality.

    The man known as Misha abandoned a life of Knicks games and opera
    nights to turn around the poor, corrupt, and complicated country
    from which he sprang. He also became a leading light among the wave
    of twentysomething rat-packers who had washed onto our shores hungry
    for American-style democracy, then eagerly trekked back home to plant
    this new-found seed in the dark soil left vacant following the Soviet
    Union's collapse.

    "He is a western person, and a very dedicated person, very dedicated
    to human rights," notes professor Dinah Shelton, of George Washington
    University's Law School, adding that when Saakashvili failed to finish
    his dissertation, his professors joked that his tackling Georgia's
    weighty issues as its president was no excuse.

    Little seemed to stop Saakashvili once back in Georgia. When his
    mentor, then-president Eduard Shevardnadze, balked at Saakashvili's
    attempts to tackle official corruption, Saakashvili quit the government
    and went to work forming an opposition party.

    After winning election to the head of the Tbilisi city council, he
    then used his populist appeal to claw his way back into power during
    the Rose Revolution of 2003. Again, he was unyielding, breaking with
    other opposition leaders who proposed talks with Sheverdnadze and
    sought a more measured approach. Instead Saakashvili and his supporters
    stormed the parliament chamber where Shevardnadze was holed up, then
    reportedly chased him from the building under the threat of flowers
    instead of guns.

    Answering critics, Saakashvili told reporters at the time that his
    style was the type that "mobilizes people here," noting later that
    "Georgia needs a new way" and that every moment Shevardnadze remained
    in power meant "losing time."

    Despite criticism of some of Saakashvili's methods--and despite
    evidence that a frustrated Saakashvili turned to a more thuggish
    approach himself during crackdowns on demonstrators last fall--his
    many successes spring from the same tight-rope approach.

    He has overhauled the police, brought about important economic reforms,
    increased average salaries, and improved the country's power supply,
    notes Alexandra Stiglmayer, a senior Brussels-based policy analyst
    with the independent think tank European Stability Initiative.

    "Saakashvili may be a complex personality and he has certainly
    made mistakes. But he has given the civil society breathing space,"
    she says. "Compared with its neighbors in the region, such as the
    Northern Caucasus region in Russia, but also Armenia, Azerbaijan,
    and eastern Turkey, Georgia is more liberal, more open, and more
    committed to the rule of law."

    The question now is whether he can stay in power. His old professors
    certainly hope their favored son will weather this latest storm.

    Professor Damrosch recalls happening upon Saakashvili riding his
    bicycle when she was visiting Washington at the same time he was
    pursuing his doctoral studies there. She waved and Saakashvili sailed
    through several lanes of traffic just to chat.

    "The image of Misha on a bicycle--whether in Washington, New York,
    or the more mountainous terrain of Georgia --conveys something of
    his energetic spirit," says Damrosch. "I can't think of anything that
    would slow him down."
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