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  • Situation in South Ossetia "potentially explosive"

    La Vanguardia , Spain
    Aug 14 2008


    Situation in South Ossetia "potentially explosive"

    [Editorial by F. de Carreras: "Sorcerer's Apprentices"]

    At dawn last Thursday, Georgian troops launched a brutal and
    unexpected land and air attack on Tskhinvali, the capital of South
    Ossetia. A few hours later, Russia counterattacked with all its
    military might. Shortly afterward Abkhazia went to Ossetia's defence,
    confronting Georgia. The Russian troops easily took control of the
    situation in Ossetia. They crossed the border into Georgia and
    harassed Gori, the country's second city, which is very close to
    Tbilisi, the capital. In the face of such a forceful reaction, Georgia
    declared a ceasefire, but Russia continued its "preventative"
    penetration into Georgian territory until it had secured its
    rear-guard positions. Shortly before receiving French President
    Sarkozy, currently serving as EU president, in Moscow, Russia also
    declared a ceasefire through a provisional truce.

    Georgia's unexpected attack on South Ossetia occurred just at the
    beginning of the "Olympic peace." On Friday, just hours after the
    fighting began, Putin and Bush hardly knew what to say to each other
    when they were together in Beijing at the spectacular opening of the
    Olympic Games. Nevertheless it is quite improbable that the decision
    for Georgia to attack South Ossetia was made independently by the
    foolish President Saakashvili, a faithful pawn of Bush's in the
    region.

    Although analyses of the attack are not yet clear, everything
    indicates that the purpose was to test how Russia would respond to a
    provocation in the Caucasus region after having lost its influence in
    the Balkans. What was demonstrated is that the Russia of Putin and
    Medvedev is not the Russia of Yeltsin. Their current reaction
    capability and political intelligence in defence of their own specific
    interests is much better. What is most likely is that the attack has
    to do with Bush's latest foreign policy mistake and with the first
    positive action by the European Union, an action that was also brave
    and autonomous. This was the time for the EU to start asserting itself
    in an area where it should be exercising influence.

    At any rate, despite the truce, the Caucasus region is potentially
    explosive. Let us examine some historical aspects that will help to
    understand the situation.

    The Ossetians are a Caucasian people, ethnically different from the
    Georgians, who have traditionally had good relations with Russia. They
    have enjoyed autonomy since the time of the czars. With the
    independence of Georgia after the disintegration of the USSR in 1991,
    South Ossetia - North Ossetia is part of Russia as an autonomous
    province - remained an enclave in Georgian territory. This situation
    provoked a military conflict that ended in a precarious agreement by
    which South Ossetia became a de facto independent territory of Georgia
    under Russia's protection. The Abkhazians, also located within
    Georgian territory but ethnically different from Georgians in addition
    to being Muslims, found themselves in a similar position, which helped
    widen Russia's narrow strip of access to the Black Sea which remained
    after Ukraine got its independence.

    In addition to all this, since 2006, the only pipeline carrying oil
    from the deposits near the Caspian Sea north of Iraq and the former
    Soviet republics north of Afghanistan that does not pass through
    Russia has crossed Georgian territory. For that reason, Georgia has
    become an enclave that is strategic for Western control of oil in that
    region. At the NATO summit last April, Georgia and Ukraine were
    candidates to join the Alliance. Because of pressure from Russia they
    were not admitted.

    Up to now Russia has not forced the issue of independence for South
    Ossetia and Abkhazia, leaving them in an uncertain legal limbo of de
    facto independence. Nevertheless, the Russian foreign minister
    announced last winter that the recognition of Kosovo as an independent
    state would have implications on the situation of South Ossetia and
    other territories in the Ca ucasus.

    After the military activity of the last few days, some observers have
    asked, "Why yes to Kosovo and no to South Ossetia and Abkhazia? The
    legal precedents involving several breaches of international law in
    the Balkans comprise another factor in the conflict. Also keep in mind
    that other countries in the region - Daguestan, Chechnyia, Ingusetia,
    Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia - are also notorious centres of
    instability. In this sense the Balkans are a minor theme in comparison
    to the Caucasus region.

    Thus the ingredients of conflict are all present: ethnicity,
    religions, nationalism to excite the people; oil and energy policy as
    real economic factors; Russia's outlet to the Black Sea and limits to
    the area controlled by NATO as basic geostrategic factors; proximity
    to war zones (Afghanistan and Iraq) or of conflict (Iran and the
    Middle East ) as centres of military interest. Therefore to play with
    war in the Caucasus region is to play with fire. We hope these brief
    and tragic days have served as a lesson to certain sorcerer's
    apprentices.

    [translated from Spanish]
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