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    Irish Times, Ireland
    Aug 18 2008



    HEAD TO HEAD


    Is the conflict in Georgia a sign of renewed Russian aggression?
    Daragh McDowell agrees with the motion, but Seamus Martin disagrees

    Russia deliberately provoked the war in Georgia as part of a wider
    strategy of bringing ex-Soviet states to heel, writes Daragh McDowell

    YES: THE GEORGIAN attack on Tskhinvali, the "capital" of the
    self-declared republic of South Ossetia on the night of August 7th,
    was the trigger for the horrifying events we are witnessing in the
    Caucasus. It also marked the beginning of serious coverage of the
    conflict in the western media. Its previous neglect has meant that the
    full story of the run-up to this war has been obscured.

    After the Soviet Union's collapse, the newly independent state of
    Georgia began to chart a foreign policy course towards the West. It
    refused to join the new Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) that
    Russia hoped to use to maintain its glavniy (primacy) in the
    post-Soviet "near abroad" (to use the Russian terminology). Moscow
    refused to accept Georgia's right to remain outside the CIS, and began
    arming and supporting separatist groupings in South Ossetia and
    Abkhazia as a means of destabilising the Tbilisi government and
    forcing it into compliance.

    The plan worked, creating two so-called "frozen conflicts" on Georgian
    territory. Russia used these to place military forces on Georgian
    territory under the guise of "peacekeepers", to extend its
    influence. Since then, Russia has made little secret of its desire to
    annex the two breakaway regions, dismembering Georgia and undermining
    its independence. This strategy of "armed suasion" as the Russian
    defence establishment called it, was also used in the Transdniestrian
    region of Moldova, and Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan - two countries
    that showed unwillingness to bend to Moscow's will once they achieved
    independence.

    This situation has become increasingly intolerable for Georgia over
    the past few years. In the Rose Revolution of 2003, its people removed
    the discredited Eduard Shevardnadze from power and replaced him with
    Mikheil Saakashvili. They gave him a mandate to reunify the country
    and to reorient its foreign policy away from Russia. Putin and his
    cabal of siloviki (former security-service apparatchiks) despise
    Saakashvili and, as a result, have spent the last five years
    attempting to secure his downfall, and to end Georgian defiance.

    The recognition of Kosovan independence by the West earlier this year
    convinced the Kremlin to increase the tempo of its plans for
    Georgia. The Russians began taking steps towards recognition of Abkhaz
    and South Ossetian independence as well as increasing economic and
    military aid. It issued Russian passports and citizenship in both
    regions in preparation for formal annexation and, as we now know, as a
    cynical means of manufacturing a casus belli. Over the past few
    months, Russian fighters have invaded Georgian airspace, destroyed
    Georgian reconnaissance drones and dropped dummy bombs in an attempt
    to provoke a Georgian response.

    In the week leading up the invasion, South Ossetian forces, backed by
    Russia, initiated a "sniper war" against Georgia, firing on its towns
    with mortars and small arms. A unilateral ceasefire declared by
    Saakashvili on the night of August 7th was ignored by the other
    side. Faced with few other options to defend his country and its
    citizens, Saakashvili made the fateful decision to invade. He was
    foolish to walk into an obvious Russian trap. This raises questions
    about his leadership, but he faced a Russian act of aggression.

    If all this was not enough to serve as proof of Russia's intentions,
    the conduct of the war should be. Russian forces have moved well
    beyond the original conflict zone, opening a second front in Abkhazia
    and moving into Georgia proper. They have initiated a de facto naval
    blockade and invaded the strategic towns of Poti and Gori. They have
    demanded effective annexation of South Ossetia and Abkhazia as the
    price of peace. They plan to remove Georgia's legitimate government
    and again make it a vassal state. While Russia has made bloodcurdling
    claims of Georgian war crimes, the only independent investigation at
    time of writing (by Human Rights Watch) has found evidence only of
    ethnic cleansing of Georgian villages in Abkhazia and South Ossetia,
    and of Russian use of cluster munitions against Georgian
    civilians. Russia has poured hundreds, if not thousands, of
    irregulars, modern-day Black and Tans, into Georgia to spread terror
    and chaos.

    Finally, Russia has inserted into Georgian territory two SS-21
    "Scarab" short-range missile launchers. The only possible use for
    these in a conflict of this type is for delivery of tactical nuclear
    weapons. They are Russia's insurance policy, deterring those who would
    come to Georgia's aid to prevent it being torn asunder by the
    Kremlin's war machine.

    This was a calculated, deliberate war of aggression initiated by
    Moscow. Russia's actions over the past week were designed to
    demonstrate to its other former dominions that dissent will not be
    tolerated, that those who do not accept Russian glavniy (such as
    Ukraine or the Baltic states) will suffer a similar fate. While
    formulating its response, Europe would do well to remember that.

    Daragh McDowell is a doctoral student researching post-Soviet foreign
    policy at the University of Oxford. He blogs at
    www.armthepeasants.blogspot.com

    Georgia launched a sneak attack on South Ossetia while the world
    watched the Olympics opening ceremony, writes Seamus Martin

    NO: THE PEOPLE who gave you "Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction" now
    want you to believe in "Russia's invasion of Georgia" and "Moscow's
    disregard of the ceasefire agreement". It has emerged, however, that
    Russian troops are patrolling parts of Georgia proper as part of the
    six-point agreement brokered by France.

    Having let down its Georgian friends in the real war, the US and its
    Nato allies have now offered the Georgians the silver medal of a
    propaganda victory. The Russians have already taken gold.

    Let's look at some facts. Georgia, under the presidency of Mikheil
    Saakashvili, launched a sneak attack on the disputed region of South
    Ossetia while the attention of the world was on the opening of the
    Olympic Games in Beijing. The western media woke up later that day and
    reported the Russian response but ignored the initial massive
    escalation from the Georgian side.

    Russia replied vigorously in the way the United States would if its
    citizens and soldiers had come under the same sort of aggression. The
    Georgians were routed. The propaganda war began shortly after Georgia
    lost the real war. On Monday, August 11th, we were bombarded with
    official statements from Tbilisi, all of which were untrue.

    The most serious was that Russia had deliberately targeted civilians
    in the town of Gori. Just a few kilometres from South Ossetia, Gori
    had been the main staging point for the Georgian attack. Russia
    targeted military positions there using conventional means and a small
    number of cruise missiles. Some apartment buildings were accidentally
    hit and civilians were killed. In war, terrible things such as this
    can happen. Ask the staff of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade or the
    surviving journalists from the Palestine Hotel in Baghdad.

    We are now being told that Russia is breaking the ceasefire agreement
    by posting troops outside South Ossetia. If you read the agreement,
    you will see that this too is open to question.

    Point number five of the six-point agreement brokered by France, while
    calling on Russia to "withdraw to the lines prior to the start of
    hostilities" also allowed Russia, "while awaiting an international
    mechanism", to "implement additional security measures".

    On seeing this proposal, the Georgians immediately recognised it as
    allowing Russia to patrol the main highway from Tbilisi to the
    west. Negotiating from a position of weakness due to the calamitous
    and botched intervention by Mr Saakashvili, they tried to limit
    Russian activity to a six-month period. They failed. Full details of
    this can be found in the New York Times of August 13th under the
    headline "Peace Plan Offers Russia Rationale to Advance".

    Until the Georgian attack of August 8th, despite constant skirmishing
    over the years, the South Ossetia question had settled into what is
    known in diplomatic circles as a "frozen conflict". With the
    full-scale Georgian attack, a very delicate equilibrium was upset. The
    frozen conflict became a hot war. The indigenous people of North and
    South Ossetia who had suffered the massacre of their schoolchildren in
    Beslan now saw their southern regional capital in ruins.

    I hold no brief for Russia or its leaders. In my time as a staff
    correspondent for this newspaper in the countries of the former Soviet
    Union, I have been critical of many of Russia's actions, including
    conduct of the two wars in Chechnya. I have been in the Caucasus on
    numerous occasions, in Georgia itself and in its other "frozen
    conflict" area of Abkhazia. I know the place I am writing about and I
    like the warm, friendly Georgian people. They deserve better than
    this.

    My most recent visit to Georgia earlier this year was as an
    international observer at the presidential elections. I am not
    permitted to write about my own experiences in that election. I can,
    however, quote from the report on the election by the OSCE's Office
    for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights. It is in the public
    domain for anyone who wants to study it in full at
    www.osce.org/odihr-elections/14207.html

    I raise this to bring some clarity to the suggestions that Mr
    Saakashvili is totally committed to western-style democracy. The
    report verifies instances of intimidation of members of the public
    service and the democratic opposition, suggests that Mr Saakashvili
    used state resources in his election campaign and is critical of
    vote-count and tabulation procedures, as well as the complaints and
    appeals process. The election was forced by the country's democratic
    opposition following demonstrations on the streets of Tbilisi that
    were brutally put down by Mr Saakashvili's special police.

    Nato should be wary of admitting a country that has not completely
    committed itself to democracy and is prone to military adventures. The
    Atlantic Alliance is well equipped with lethal weaponry. The last
    thing it needs is a loose cannon.

    Séamus Martin is the retired International editor of The Irish
    Times. His memoir Good Times and Bad was published earlier this year

    © 2008 The Irish Times

    http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/opinion /2008/0818/1218868019292.html
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