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Tornike Gordadze: Russia's Maximum Plan Is To Make Russia Its Sateli

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  • Tornike Gordadze: Russia's Maximum Plan Is To Make Russia Its Sateli

    TORNIKE GORDADZE: RUSSIA'S MAXIMUM PLAN IS TO MAKE RUSSIA ITS SATELITE

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/
    14.05.2009 17:36 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ "The war between Georgia and Russia had a brader
    areal," Tornike Gordadze, Director of Caucasus Studies Centre
    under French Institute of Anatolian Studies, said during the
    conference on "Observing Security in South Caucasus: Stability and
    Transformation". According to Mr. Gordadze, the conflict started
    on August 7, 2008. "The war was just an episode of Russian-Georgian
    conflict which had begun much earlier and probably continues to date,"
    he added.

    "The war can cerrtainly be viewed in a broader context. There were some
    activists who insisted on Russian-Georgian conflict being in process
    for 4 centuries," Mr. Gordadze noted, emphasizing that both parties'
    policies proposed very strange and non-academic interpretations of
    Russian-Georgian history. "One the one hand, RF Ministers argued that
    their country had created the Georgian state. Georgian politicians,
    one the other hand, argued that Georgia always led heroic battles
    with Russia."

    "Russia's minimum plan was to make Georgia a neutral neighbor not
    belonging to any geopolitical group, and its maximum plan was to make
    the country its satelite," Gordadze said, noting that Georgia has been
    Russia's satelite since 1994-95, atlhough this led to nothing good.

    Russian military bases were deployed in Georgia. The appointed
    ministers were representatives from Russia but that didn't produce
    a positive result either. This too, caused Georgia to change its
    geopolitical orientation. Certainly, war was not the only political
    tool. There were other tools such as energy resources, Georgia's
    internal conflicts, pressure upon diaspora in 2006, as well as econimic
    pressure," Mr. Gordadze said, adding that tensity in Russian-Georgian
    relations was observed under President Shevardnadze. Gordadze finds
    Georgia the only CIS country conflicting with Georgia on different
    issues.

    Since the start of 2008, all this was likely to lead to war. Russia's
    reaction to Western countries' recognition of Kosovo was so harsh
    that its further steps in Caucasus were evident. And that will
    be a response to Caucasus and first of all, to Georgia," he said,
    stressing that on March 6, a few weeks after Kosovo's reognition,
    Russia denounced CIS Treaty on Blockading Unrecognized States. This
    was followed by the Bucharest Summit (held early in April), where
    Georgia was denied NATO membership. War could have been avoided had
    West been more active. But it's also thanks to West that the war
    ended so soon," the Georgian politician said, noting that West has
    changaed its attitide to Russia following the war.
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