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ISTANBUL: Military Exercises In The Caucasus: Political Anxieties Re

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  • ISTANBUL: Military Exercises In The Caucasus: Political Anxieties Re

    MILITARY EXERCISES IN THE CAUCASUS: POLITICAL ANXIETIES REVEALED

    Today's Zaman
    Sept 25 2012
    Turkey

    It has been said that "weapons speak to the wise -- but in general
    they need interpreters." Last week, several military exercises were
    conducted in the Caucasus. What political messages do these weapons
    and these exercises hold?

    Russia's "Kavkaz-2012" military exercise sparked discussions around
    the region. Held Sept. 17-23 in the North Caucasus and adjacent
    sectors of the Black and the Caspian Seas, the exercises involved
    8,000 military personnel. The participation of President Vladimir
    Putin added additional impetus to speculation among experts,
    many of whom also recalled that the last time Moscow held such a
    large-scale military exercise was in advance of the 2008 August
    Russian-Georgian war. Thus official Tbilisi along with independent
    experts in Azerbaijan declared that this seems to be an attempt
    by Moscow to show off its military muscle to the South Caucasus
    countries. Several months ago, Georgian officials stated their worry
    that Moscow would stage a provocation during the run up to the Oct. 1
    Parliamentary election. This speculation is based on a scheduling
    change: The Kavkaz-2012 military exercise was unexpectedly moved to
    end of the September, which Tbilisi interpreted as a threat.

    Following the conclusion of the exercises, it seems an opportune
    moment for analysis. It does seem clear that one of aim was to
    demonstrate Moscow's military prowess to the Western-oriented
    post-Soviet countries, notably Georgia and Azerbaijan; but there are
    other dynamics at play here too -- first to test out the "Iranian
    scenario." If there is a Western/Israel military engagement in Iran,
    Moscow wants to demonstrate its military capability. This would be a
    message for the West and NATO, rather than Georgia. For Moscow, a US
    and Israeli strike on Iran is not a question of if, but when. Russia is
    not interested because of its plans to intervene in Iran, but because
    Western/Israel actions could provide the Kremlin with an excellent
    pretext to intervene elsewhere. Second, Russia wants to consolidate
    its military capabilities before the Sochi Winter Olympics in 2014. On
    a number of occasions Russian special services have indicated their
    fear of some provocation by Georgia, as Sochi, of course, is very
    close to the occupied Georgian territories. Speaking as a president,
    current Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev explicitly warned of threats to
    the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympic Games and actually mentioned Georgia in
    this context during a meeting of Russia's National Security Council
    in Sochi on Feb. 18, 2011. In response, Georgian President Mikheil
    Saakashvili told a local television channel a few days later that
    "creating a physical threat" to the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympic Games
    "is neither in our plans, nor our capability."

    However, on May 20, 2011, the Georgian Parliament passed a resolution
    whereby Georgia became the first country to recognize the 19th
    century massacres and deportations of Circassians by Tsarist Russia
    in the northwest Caucasus as "genocide." Georgia's recognition of
    the Circassian massacre as genocide seems like an anti-Russian policy
    move with regard to the Sochi Olympic Games, given that the Olympic
    Charter states that the Olympic Games cannot be held in a territory
    where genocide has taken place.

    The third reason for holding the military exercise is to test the
    reforms within the Russian army. President Putin's appearance at
    the first day of the exercise was likely designed to emphasize his
    personal role: Putin, father of military reform.

    Indeed, Russia will increase its defense spending by 53 percent
    between 2011 and 2014, which means a clear militarization of the
    Russian state budget.

    Although NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen's statement
    that Russia had failed to officially notify the alliance about the
    aims or terms of the exercise, there are clear grounds that disprove
    Rasmussen's allegation.

    Firstly, in December 2011, the chief of the General Staff of the
    Russian Armed Forces, Gen. Nikolai Makarov, convened a briefing
    of foreign military attaches in Moscow, which was attended by NATO
    officials.

    Secondly, the Founding Act on Mutual Relations, Cooperation and
    Security between NATO and the Russian Federation of 1997 states that
    the parties must be notified officially if the numerical strength
    exceeds more than 10,000 servicemen (in the Kavkaz-2012 maneuvers,
    8,000 military personnel were involved), and the maneuvers were
    conducted not only at a distance from the borders of any NATO
    countries, but also more than a hundred kilometers from the Georgian
    border.

    It should also be noted that before Kavkaz-2012, the Russian-backed
    Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) held a military
    exercise in Armenia called "Interaction-2012" (Sept. 15-19), which
    was designed to test the organization's 20,000-strong Collective
    Rapid Reaction Forces. Although less important than Kavkaz-2012, the
    CSTO exercise in Armenia is arguably more significant, on the grounds
    that after Uzbekistan's exodus (or in the words of Uzbek officials,
    "suspension of membership"), CSTO wants to demonstrate its strength.

    Even more importantly, while the scale of the CSTO exercises operation
    was much smaller than last year's, the political messages to Azerbaijan
    and Georgia were more significant. The question of CSTO's right to
    intervene if Azerbaijan starts a military liberation operation in
    Karabakh has long been a matter of debate. In this small exercise,
    Moscow sought to underline its support to the Armenian leadership.

    In the meantime, the "Eternity-2012" staff headquarters trainings
    for Azerbaijan, Turkey and Georgia began on Sept. 24 and will end Sept.

    28. This annual computer-supported training focuses on the protection
    of oil and gas pipelines. Despite the timeline of other military
    training in the region, this is genuinely designed for pipelines.

    The recent military exercises in the region are another step in a
    carefully articulated political dance on the part of the governments
    involved, with demonstrations of military ambition, territorial
    anxiety and political showmanship. The conclusion of this "dance" seems
    open-ended, and certainly the history of such interaction is long.

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