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Outside View: Should Georgia Just Let Go?

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  • Outside View: Should Georgia Just Let Go?

    OUTSIDE VIEW: SHOULD GEORGIA JUST LET GO?
    By Bennett Ramberg

    Middle East Times
    Sept 18 2008
    Egypt

    LOS ANGELES, Sept. 18 (UPI) -- Moscow's brutal military action to
    bring Tbilisi to heel should not excuse Georgia's own use of force
    to reassert control over South Ossetia. Clearly the Georgians learned
    little from recent history: In today's world, countries that attempt
    to hold on to rebellious provinces with longstanding grievances
    risk a long, bloody resistance and/or outside intervention by more
    powerful opponents.

    This begs the question, not only in the Transcaucasus but elsewhere:
    Is letting go the better course? The cumulative evidence since
    World War II suggests that ethnic or national groups that cannot
    live together are better off living apart. Successful application
    of this principle to the Georgian-Ossetian conflict not only would
    resolve this confounding thorn but also would encourage resolution
    of struggles elsewhere.

    South Ossetia's claim to autonomy or more springs not simply from its
    own history but from international convention and practice. In 1945 the
    U.N. Charter laid the foundation, promoting the "self-determination
    of peoples." In the early years this encouraged the ethno-religious
    partition of colonies.

    The division of British Palestine and India marked two
    results. However, by 1960 the General Assembly stepped back. In its
    landmark decolonization Resolution 1514 it called the "disruption
    of national unity and the territorial integrity of a country
    ... incompatible" with the Charter. And, because the Charter excluded
    U.N. intervention into matters of domestic jurisdiction, this left
    populations that could not integrate politically out on a limb.

    No matter. Rather than live with the unacceptable, many revolted. Some
    governments crushed rebellions -- the fate of Biafrans and
    Chechens. Others, after long-hurting stalemates, reached
    power-sharing agreements -- the denouement of Northern Ireland's
    long "Troubles." Then there were the partitions, often after bitter
    conflicts, that gave birth to Bangladesh, new Balkan states, divided
    Cyprus, Eritrea and Timor-Leste -- the first three instances midwifed
    by India, the United States and Turkey, respectively.

    Russia's military action and recognition of South Ossetia repeats the
    history of interventionist partition. And while this has generated
    the outrage of Tbilisi and the West, South Ossetia has a legitimate
    claim to self-determination as envisioned under the U.N. Charter. An
    ethnically defined region that Czarist Russia annexed in 1801, the
    territory fell under Soviet Georgian administration following the
    Russian Revolution. Ossetians continued to promote their cultural
    identity, and, with the end of the Soviet Union looming, their regional
    council petitioned Georgia's Supreme Council to become an "autonomous
    republic." The 1991 denial inspired civil conflict resulting in nearly
    1,000 deaths and displacement of thousands who took refuge in Georgia
    and the Russian republic of North Ossetia.

    The following decade saw a peacekeeping force of Ossetians, Russians
    and Georgians, monitored by the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe, maintain the peace. But as the years passed,
    so did Georgia's dissatisfaction with Moscow's growing influence
    over the province, rising South Ossetian nationalism punctuated by
    sporadic border violence. Tbilisi mounted a political campaign to get
    European and American support to regain control over the province,
    but the efforts failed to generate tangible results, laying the ground
    for current events.

    Georgia could have avoided its travail had it learned from recent
    European experience that letting go is something countries can adjust
    to. Serbia's assent to Montenegro's 2006 exit from their union, the
    1993 dissolution of Czechoslovakia and the breakup of the Soviet Union,
    which opened the door to Georgia's own independence, provide examples.

    Despite the opportunity lost to peacefully resolve South Ossetia's
    drive for more secure autonomy, Georgia can still salvage regional
    settlement by taking a leaf from what other war-torn regions promise
    through the ballot box.

    Following bloody civil wars with Sudan and Papua New Guinea, Southern
    Sudan and Bougainville, respectively, achieved autonomy with the
    promise to settle final status through referenda. Tbilisi should
    concede the same. A vote managed and legitimized by the OSCE --
    the international community refused to endorse a 2006 South Ossetian
    nationalist referendum for independence -- would permit the population
    to decide among four options: reintegration into Georgia, semiautonomy,
    independence or union with North Ossetia in the Russian Federation. In
    the likely case of endorsement of partition, agreement should grant
    ethnic Georgians the option to resettle in Georgia proper. Prior to
    the election, U.N. peacekeepers could replace Russian forces to keep
    law and order.

    The proposed settlement brings at least one other advantage:
    Successful, it could encourage other regions that risk or confront even
    more difficult strife today to follow suit. Sri Lanka, Indian Kashmir,
    Israel/Palestine, Nagorno-Karabakh, Sudan/Darfur, Moros/Philippines,
    Iraq/Kurdistan, China/Taiwan and China/Tibet could well be the
    beneficiaries.
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