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What's Saakashvili Got To Do With It?

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  • What's Saakashvili Got To Do With It?

    WHAT'S SAAKASHVILI GOT TO DO WITH IT?
    by Pavel Zarifullin
    Translated by Elena Leonova

    Agency WPS
    Source: Russkii Kurier, November 6, 2006, p. 7
    What the Papers Say Part A (Russia)
    November 9, 2006 Thursday

    The Caucasus becomes a field for Russian-US confrontation

    Russia, the United States, and the geopolitical chessboard of Eurasia;
    For some people, the break-up of the Soviet Union was like a physical
    pain. These days, Russia - as a living, youthful organism - wants
    to breathe deep, arrange itself comfortably, regain what belongs to
    it. Well, why not?

    BODY:

    South Ossetia will hold an independence referendum on November 12. A
    similar referendum took place 15 years ago. Back then, the South
    Ossetians voted in favor of independence. They'll vote the same way
    now; no doubt of that.

    For some people, the break-up of the Soviet Union was like a physical
    pain. These days, Russia - as a living, youthful organism - wants to
    breathe deep, arrange itself comfortably, regain what belongs to it.

    Well, why not?

    Look at Turkey, for example. It came into existence as a geopolitical
    formation in the course of Kemal Ataturk's reforms. It feels naturally
    comfortable within certain borders. Besides its state borders, there
    is also Northern Cyprus, a de facto part of Turkey.

    Until recently, the Turks themselves and everyone else accepted this
    "living" Turkey. These days, some are seeking to "squeeze" Turkey.

    Through various political machinations, they want to take Northern
    Cyprus away from Turkey and draw it into the European Union; they want
    to take away south-eastern Turkey - Turkish Kurdistan - in favor of
    the pro-American Iraqi Kurdistan, de facto established already.

    Armenia hasn't expressed any territorial claims as yet, but current
    developments are quite enough for the Turks. The Turkish leadership
    - the military in power - is sounding the alarm. It has started
    seeking strategic partners in the east, working on relations with
    Russia and China. There is talk of Turkey joining the Shanghai
    Cooperation Organization, or even withdrawing from NATO. In recent
    years, Turkey has stopped providing any real support to Turkic
    nationalist organizations in Russia and China - organizations
    originally established by Turkish and American intelligence agencies
    for specific purposes.

    Why is Turkey doing all this? Because the West is trying to take
    away what the Turks see as inalienably theirs. They know that if
    they surrender Northern Cyprus, the entire complex Turkish system
    established by Kemal Ataturk will crumble.

    And Turkey's neighbors would ask for more: Syria wanting Arab Antakya,
    Bulgaria and Greece wanting Edirne, the Armenians wanting Kars,
    Trabzon, and Van. Soon there would be nothing left of Turkey.

    Now, based on Turkey's experience, let's look at the current situation
    in Georgia, South Ossetia, and the Russian Federation.

    Russia is recovering from the knockout blow dealt by perestroika,
    and as it wakes up, it's naturally asking where it is (the search for
    a national ideology) and exactly what it is in geographical terms (a
    map showing what is or is not part of Russia). De facto, South Ossetia
    and Abkhazia have been part of Russia for 15 years, whatever anyone
    might say. De facto, Georgia is not part of Russia. That's understood.

    But the point is that besides Russia, there is also a power which
    is even stronger (thus far): the United States, which is building an
    empire of its own on the Eurasian continent - an empire known as the
    Greater Middle East. And the United States has its own notions and its
    own map. That map shows a United Kurdistan, for example, and Georgia
    - including South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Two maps are superimposed;
    two giant states are gradually returning to Cold War policies; two
    empires are butting heads in the Caucasus for "Lebensraum," each of
    them pulling Caspian Sea oil towards itself via its pipelines.

    That is the grim truth, in contrast to the fairy tales told to the
    media by official Foreign Ministry spokespersons or courtier political
    consultants from the Kremlin and the Cabinet. Eurasia has long since
    become a giant chessboard: Moscow moves a piece called Yanukovych,
    America responds by moving Saakashvili, the Kremlin surrenders Adjaria,
    America plays Limonov.

    According to the logic of this game of civilizations, the people
    of South Ossetia will vote for independence in their referendum -
    just as the people of Montenegro did, according to the logic of a
    similar game. America took Montenegro, although it had no right to
    it; but Russia will take what belongs to it by right - South Ossetia,
    Abkhazia, Trans-Dniester (Pridnestrovie), and later on, perhaps, most
    of Ukraine. And there's no need to fear that this will complicate
    relations with the West. The Cold War is already underway. And
    Saakashvili is completely beside the point here. On the geopolitical
    chessboard, he's nothing but a pawn; he may be protected, or he may
    be sacrificed.
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