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What Should Be The Approach Of The Tagliavini Commission?

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  • What Should Be The Approach Of The Tagliavini Commission?

    WHAT SHOULD BE THE APPROACH OF THE TAGLIAVINI COMMISSION?
    By Richard Rousseau

    Daily Georgian Times
    http://www.geotimes.ge/index.php?m=home& newsid=18261
    Sept 14 2009

    Originally due to be released at the end of July, the final report of
    the Tagliavini Commission investigating the causes of the August 2008
    conflict between Georgia and Russia was delayed for two months on July
    4 and scheduled to be submitted to the EU Council of Ministers by the
    end of September. The submission of the report is a potential bombshell
    in Georgia-Russia relations and more broadly in EU-US-Russia affairs.

    The Commission's sole objective is to establish what took place in
    August and what facts and circumstances led to such developments. Why
    did the war start? What was the background to the conflict? What
    happened during it? These are the main questions members of the
    Commission are addressing.

    The events before the war are being studied as well as postwar
    developments. This may be linked to the United Nations General
    Assembly's adoption on September 9 of a text recognising the right of
    return of internally displaced persons throughout Georgia, including
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Initiated by Georgia, the resolution is
    surely a means to force Russia to fulfill its obligations stipulated in
    the August 12 2008 ceasefire agreement brokered by then-EU President
    Nicolas Sarkozy. This called for both Russian and Georgian troops to
    move back to their original positions.

    For Georgia, the danger is that the final document will focus mostly
    on the period between August 1st and August 7th. If it is given
    such an emphasis it is quite likely that the report will put most
    of the responsibility for last year's events on Georgia. Indeed,
    the Commissioners will have a hard time questioning the active role
    played by Georgia in "de-freezing" the conflict. Needless to say, the
    Kremlin insists in its arguments on the importance of these convulsive
    days which were marked, it pretends, by a string of provocations from
    the Georgian side. However, none other than the Russian Prime Minister
    Vladimir Putin is providing Georgia with compelling counter-arguments
    should the Commission's conclusions put the burden of responsibility
    on Tbilisi or stress the preceding few days in its explanation for
    the outbreak of the war.

    On the eve of his trip to Poland to commemorate the 70th anniversary
    of the outbreak of the Second World War Putin, as any polite visitor
    would do, penned a piece for the Polish daily Gazeta addressing
    himself to the Polish people. It was a conciliatory appeal that
    sought to address Polish sensitivities to the role played by the
    Soviet Union at the start of World War II. Putin paid tribute not
    only to the sacrifices of the allied forces in that war but even the
    German anti-Hitler resistance. He welcomed the integration of the
    Europe born from the ashes of the war, although he did not miss the
    opportunity to compare the Franco-German reconciliation of the 1950s
    and 1960s to the current cooperation between Germany and Russia.

    But at the heart of Putin's letter was a passionate meditation
    on the Nazi-Soviet Treaty of Non-Aggression of August 23, 1939,
    better known as the Hitler-Stalin Pact. Putin wrote that Russia's
    Parliament condemned this pact as immoral in 1989 and that he fully
    endorsed this view. This was a surprising statement considering that
    a few weeks before a Russian TV channel (all Russian broadcasters
    are State-controlled) had broadcast a documentary presenting
    "evidence" that the Polish Intelligence Service was reportedly
    planning an invasion of the Soviet Union in alliance with Hitler's
    army. However, Putin stressed in his letter that the Nazi-Soviet Pact
    was the culmination of a sequence of mistakes and miscalculations on
    the part of the great European powers in the fight against Hitler's
    aggressive projects. He pointed his finger in particular at the Munich
    Agreement concluded in September 1938, which led to the dismemberment
    of Czechoslovakia.

    Putin wrote: "There is no doubt that one can have all reasons to
    condemn the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact concluded in August 1939. But a
    year before, in Munich, France and England signed a well-known treaty
    with Hitler and thus destroyed all the hope for a united front to
    fight fascism."

    In today's Russian historiography, this agreement is considered the
    shameful culmination of the Western European policy of "appeasement"
    or compromise with the Fuhrer. Putin argued that after the signing
    of this agreement, from which the Soviet Union was excluded, the
    Soviet Government had no other alternative than to negotiate its
    own agreement with Germany. Isolated in Europe and attacked by Japan
    in East Asia, the USSR had to accept the agreement proposed by the
    Third Reich. Any attempt to present the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact as
    the only trigger for the Second World War, continued Vladimir Putin,
    is a cynical distortion of the historical truth.

    In other words, Putin is merely saying that to understand the origin
    and causes (the purpose of the Tagliavini Commission) of World War
    II and obtain a complete picture of the factors that led to it, one
    should take note of the disturbances produced by WWI and the behaviour
    of the European great powers a few years before the cataclysm. Various
    factors are intertwined and are to be identified in the years, if not
    the decades, leading up to the conflict. The Georgian Government, in
    due time, should remind the Russian Prime Minister of this approach
    to the Nazi-Soviet Pact of 1939 and be adamant that a study of the
    Georgia-Russia military conflict cannot be taken seriously if the
    period under scrutiny is limited to the month of August 2008.

    When viewed from a broader perspective, there is little doubt that the
    responsibility for that conflict lies with Russia. With the Soviet
    Union declining, Russia skilfully encouraged Ossetia-Georgia and
    Abkhazia-Georgia antagonisms with a view to keeping Georgia within
    Russia's "sphere of influence". After the break up of the USSR Russia
    inherited the conflicts that had flared up in the Soviet era and got
    involved militarily, politically and economically on the side of the
    Ossetian and Abkhazia separatists. After that it systematically and
    stubbornly hindered moves to overcome the crises that developed in
    the 1990s and the early 2000s. Maintaining the status quo in these
    crises provided Moscow with an instrument to thwart Georgia's process
    of integration with Euro-Atlantic organisations. Moreover, one can
    hardly ignore the fact that after the disintegration of the Soviet
    empire Russia acted in a similar way to influence political processes
    in Transdniestria and in Nagorno Karabakh via Armenia.

    Tskhinvali and Sokhumi's 'emancipation' from Tbilisi was flagrantly
    accompanied by the building up of Russian protectorates. The
    recognition of the "independence" of South Ossetia and Abkhazia 26
    August 2008 provided vindication for this process, which had been
    persistently denied by the Russian authorities. Among Russia's
    destabilizing actions in the months preceding the war were the
    partial recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia on 15 April 2008;
    the strengthening of the "peacekeeping" military contingent in Abkhazia
    in the spring of 2008 and violations of Georgian air space in 2006
    and 2008.

    When analyzing the Russian-Georgian conflict through the prism of
    tendencies in international relations over the past several years
    one can see a link between it and the pursuit of Russia's worldwide
    aspirations initiated in President Vladimir Putin's Presidency. South
    Caucasus regional developments should be analysed in the context of
    a crisis in the post-Cold War system of European security. The roots
    of this crisis lie in Russia's desire to regain the status of a great
    power which has the same ability to influence the global order as
    the US. Concretely, this objective is reflected in, for instance,
    the Kremlin's interference in the 2004 Ukrainian Presidential
    election and, once that interference failed, a campaign against the
    OSCE's involvement in the transformation of post-Soviet states. The
    deterioration of the European security environment was impacted,
    in unparalleled ways, by the use of energy resources for political
    purposes in relations with some energy-dependent CIS and EU member
    states, the unilateral suspension of the Treaty on Conventional Armed
    Forces in Europe (December 2007), Russian Parliamentarians' frequent
    public statements that Ukraine and Georgia's accession to NATO would
    be unacceptable and their claims that Russia has privileged relations
    with CIS members, etc.

    Whatever conclusions the Tagliavini Commission reaches the big picture
    of the August 2008 events should be that Russia exploited the South
    Ossetian and Abkhazian conflicts to maintain its sphere of influence
    in the CIS, a concept which was for years present in the rhetoric of
    the Russian authorities.

    Richard Rousseau is an Assistant Professor and Director of the Masters
    Programme in International Relations ([email protected]) at the
    Kazakhstan Institute of Management, Economics and Strategic Studies.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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