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  • Saakashvili's rescue operation

    Saakashvili's rescue operation

    23:08 | 15/ 08/ 2008


    MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti political commentator Andrei Fedyashin) - It took
    the United States a week to understand the damage Mikheil Saakashvili's
    "Ossetian blitzkrieg" has caused him, and its fosterling, the Rose
    Democracy.

    Now Washington has launched an operation to rescue Saakasvili in real
    earnest. At the same time, a diplomatic battle is unfolding around the
    Caucasian knot. Regrettably, this struggle will be harder for Russia to
    win than any armed conflict. On August 14, U.S. Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice arrived in Paris to meet President Nicolas Sarkozy,
    and immediately left for Tbilisi to talk with Saakashvili. At the same
    time, President George W. Bush sanctioned humanitarian relief to
    Georgia. The first S-17 cargo planes have already delivered medicines
    and food there. Several U.S. warships are moving to Georgian shores
    from the Persian Gulf to prevent Russia from blocking relief aid.

    The Pentagon's humanitarian relief effort has little to do with
    Georgia's real requirements. But this is the first action in support of
    Saakashvili. He did not receive such support in the first days after
    the attack, and even began to complain that Washington's initial
    criticisms of Moscow's role in the conflict were too mild. This was not
    what he expected from those who had pushed him to attack South Ossetia.

    Now Bush has accused Russia of "not behaving like the kind of
    international partner that it has said it wants to be." The fact that
    Washington has only lashed out at Moscow a week after the event is
    telling. Usually, the Americans provide thorough propaganda support for
    their political or military actions in any part of the globe (the
    invasions of Grenada, Panama, Kuwait, Afghanistan, and Iraq are all
    good examples), and do this preemptively. The flow of inspired leaks
    and revelations from anonymous high-rankers usually mounts for weeks
    before the decisive blow.

    But it did not happen with Georgia. In fact, the U.S. press carried
    post factum "confidential" reports that during her visit to Tbilisi
    over a month ago Rice warned Saakashvili against military action. But
    he either did not get it, or lost his temper, and decided to act at his
    own risk. Sometimes pocket rulers get out of hand.

    Yet it is hard to believe that a stateswoman as formidable as "Teflon
    Condi" could not make it clear to Saakashvili what the White House
    wants or does not want him to do. And he is not an Angela Merkel or
    Silvio Berlusconi, who can easily afford not to listen to the U.S.
    secretary of state.

    The White House's recent moves suggest it has overcome the initial
    shock and has embarked on what it calls "damage control" by using the
    only remaining option - aggressive diplomacy. These moves also point to
    its blunder in anticipating Moscow's reaction to Saakashvili's action.
    Washington clearly did not expect such a prompt and forceful response
    from Dmitry Medvedev and Vladimir Putin, still less so on the first day
    of the Olympics.

    The Olympics are also a key to understanding what happened. After the
    boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympics (after the introduction of Soviet
    troops into Afghanistan), U.S. leaders became confident that all Soviet
    leaders were obsessed with the Olympic Games (which was true), and that
    it was easier for them to arrest several hundred dissidents than be
    subjected to a denigrating boycott. It is no accident that one of the
    possible responses being floated by Western diplomats is a boycott of
    the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, a measure designed to cut "the
    aggressive Russia" down to size.

    That would certainly be unpleasant, but it is not very likely. Too much
    may change in the next six years. The Bush administration will be gone,
    for one thing. Incidentally, despite all his outspoken criticism of
    Russia's "invasion of Georgia," Republican presidential nominee John
    McCain said on August 14 that as president he "would not send American
    military forces into a conflict in Georgia."

    Like Washington, London never misses a chance to step on the Kremlin's
    toes. Together they want to give a tough response to Moscow, and choose
    those sanctions that would "hit hardest at its prestige," as The Times
    put it. Apart from the Olympic boycott, Washington has suggested a
    whole package of measures against Russia, including blocking its entry
    to the WTO, denying it admission to the Organization of Economic
    Cooperation and Development (OECD), excluding it from the G8, stopping
    the talks on a new strategic partnership agreement with the EU, and
    curtailing its Partnership for Peace with NATO.

    NATO is to adopt a common position next week, when its foreign
    ministers will gather for an urgent meeting in Brussels at Bush's
    request. The meeting will take place on Monday or Tuesday (August 18 or
    August 19). The worst-case scenario for Russia is that Washington may
    persuade the Europeans to welcome Tbilisi and Kiev to the Membership
    Action Plan without delay, a proposal France, Italy and Germany
    rejected at NATO's April summit in Bucharest. The Kremlin will be
    hoping they will choose to disagree again.

    As for the new partnership agreement with the EU, Moscow has no reason
    to rush it. Russia is quite content with its current status, and Europe
    needs the agreement more than we do. Western business is much more
    interested in Russia's WTO entry, because it wants to establish itself
    firmly here. The OECD is more of a club of economic projects of its 30
    members, and we are not rushing there, either. NATO-Russia partnership
    has long become a fiction.

    Ousting Russia from the G8 looks like a tough measure, but it is not
    really. The G8 long ago lost its original essence, and has turned into
    little more than an expensive talking shop. If it is to regain its
    relevance its format must be changed. It is strange that Canada is a
    member of this club, but such huge economies as China, India, or Brazil
    are not. Nor does it include a single African nation. It has been clear
    since the end of the past century that this is inadequate. If Russia
    leaves this club, it will simply cease to exist.

    The opinions expressed in this article are the author's and do not
    necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.
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