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Russia's Colonial Aspirations

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  • Russia's Colonial Aspirations

    RUSSIA'S COLONIAL ASPIRATIONS
    By Amir Taheri

    Asharq Alawsat (The Middle East)
    http://aawsat.com/english/news.asp?section=2 &id=14002
    Sept 9 2008
    UK

    Russia has just invented a new kind of state: one in which the land
    is supposedly independent but the inhabitants are citizens of another
    country.

    Last week, Russia solemnly recognized the independence of Abkhazia
    and South Ossetia, two autonomous republics that had been part of
    Georgia since the 1920s.

    First, Russia tried to justify its military intervention by claiming
    it was trying to protect its own citizens there.

    Using force to protect one's citizens is nothing new in the history of
    nation-states. However, the normal process is to go into the hostile
    territory, rescue one's citizens and brig them out- end of the story.

    In this case, however, the Russians did not go in to bring their
    citizens out. They went in to give "independence" to Abkhazia and
    Ossetia.

    The problem is that a majority of those living in Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia today are Russian citizens.

    In Abkhazia, Russian passport holders account for 90 per cent
    of the estimated 200,000 inhabitants. Another five per cent are
    Georgians while Armenians ad other Caucasian peoples account for
    the remainder. In other words, in the newly independent Republic of
    Abkhazia there are no Abkhazians!

    A similar situation obtains in South Ossetia where Russia passport
    holders account for 95 per cent of the 75,000 inhabitants. The
    remaining five per cent are Georgians, Chechens, Ingush, Kamlouks
    and Charkess. Again, there are no Ossetians!

    This situation is a result of an earlier piece of Russian chicanery.

    >>From 2000, Moscow has been issuing Russian passports to anyone who
    demanded it in Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The sole criterion was
    that the applicant spoke Russian. That was not difficult because the
    Caucasus was part of the Soviet Union until 1991 and russified for
    two centuries.

    Russia's President Dmitri Medvedev claims that his armies
    entered Abkhazia and South Ossetia to support national liberation
    struggles. But which nations are we talking about? Since 2002, more
    than 90 per cent of the inhabitants of Abkhazia and South Ossetia
    have been voting in all Russian elections, including the one that
    made Medvedev president.

    Why did the Abkhaz and the Osset rush to get Russian passports?

    The first reason is that they both hate the Georgians with whom
    they have a long history of enmity and violence more than they hate
    the Russians.

    In 1991, Georgian President Zviad Gamsakhourdia abolished Abkhazia's
    autonomous status and ordered the destruction of Abkhaz cultural
    centres and historic monuments. In the ensuing violence, more than
    4000 Abkhaz were killed while tens of thousands fled to Russia.

    Gamsakhourdia presided over a similar scenario in South Ossetia in
    1990-92. More than 2000 Ossets were killed and many more forced out
    of their villages.

    In both cases, the Abkhaz and the Ossets regarded Russian passports
    as an insurance policy against further massacre.

    Nevertheless, it was only after 2006 that the Abkhaz and the Ossets
    rushed en masse to obtain Russian passports. The reason was the
    European Union's decision to allow Russian passport holders to travel
    freely to Europe, a privilege that holders of Georgian passports did
    not enjoy.

    But why is Russia embarking on a high-risk strategy in order to
    snatch two tiny enclaves from Georgia. (Abkhazia covers a territory
    of 8600 kilometers, smaller than Lebanon, while South Ossetia is
    even smaller with 3900 square kilometers.) The Russian move is all
    the more surprisingly because, in the previous 200 years, Russia had
    always sided with the Georgians against the Abkahz and the Ossets.

    A Turkic People, the Abkhaz were regarded by Russia as pro-Ottoman and
    anti-Russian. The Ossets, an Iranic people, were distrusted because
    they had sided with Iran in the wars that led to Russia's conquest
    of the Caucasus between 1801 and 1830.

    There are three key reasons why Russia has acted the way she did.

    The first is to signal her return as a major power that regards the
    Caucasus as part of its glacis.

    The second reason is to punish Georgia because of its quest for a
    special relationship with the United States. Georgia, with a population
    of around four million, has sent more than 3000 troops to Iraq. It has
    applied to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and is
    host to a huge American military mission. President Mikheil Sakaashvili
    has gone further by pressing for membership of the European Union.

    Thirdly, Georgia has established itself as the key alternative route
    for oil and natural gas pipelines linking the resources of the Caspian
    Basin to world markets via the Black Sea.

    This is in defiance of Russia's strategy of controlling all pipelines
    to Europe.

    By de-stabilizing Georgia, Moscow is telling Western investors to
    think twice before sinking their money into Georgian pipelines.

    Finally, Russia's lease of the port facilities at Sebastopol, in
    the Crimean Peninsula, runs out in 2017. There is little chance that
    the Ukraine, which owns the peninsula, would renew the lease. This
    would leave the Russian Black Sea fleet homeless and with difficult
    access to the warm waters, especially since Turkey, a NATO member,
    controls the Bosporus, under the Treaty of Montreux (1936).

    One alternative to Sebastopol is the Syrian port of Lattaqiya, and
    speculation about its lease to the Russian navy has been going on for
    years. However, Moscow cannot be sure that the Syrian leadership will
    not switch sides, leaving the Black Sea fleet homeless.

    By seizing Abkhazia, Russia could develop its deep-water harbors into
    a new home for its navy. Without such a base, the Russian navy would
    lose its blue-water status, becoming, in effect, a coastguard with
    limited reach.

    What we have witnessed in Abkhazia and South Ossetia is a classical
    colonial land grab, facilitated by the naivete of the Georgian leaders,
    the cowardice of the Western powers, and the weakness of Turkey and
    Iran, the two traditional powers that tried to counter-balance Russia
    in the Caucasus.

    These days, however, colonial land grab is hard to sell. This
    is why the Russian operation is presented as a move to support
    self-determination in the two enclaves.
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