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Behind Georgias spy scandal: Growing conflicts between
Russia and the US
By Simon Whelan
6 October 2006
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Georgias decision on October 3 to release four Russian
military intelligence officers, arrested last week on charges
of spying, has not lessened hostilities between the two states.
Georgia released the four officers into the custody of the
Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). It
was a climbdown by the government of President Saakashvili, but
one that still aimed to humiliate Moscow.
Georgian police marched the four past the ranked media before
their handcuffs were removed in front of a clerk, who read out
deportation orders to each one in turn. Speaking after the handover
of the officers, Saakashvilli declared, We cannot be treated
as a second-rate backyard of some kind of emerging empire.
The Russian government of President Vladimir Putin was not
ready to compromise and responded aggressively, indefinitely cutting
off all road, rail, air and sea links between Russia and Georgia.
Flights to Russia from Tbilisi were cancelled and the ferry service
from the Georgian Black Sea port of Poti to Sochi on the Russian
shore remains in port.
Welcoming the four officers home, Defence Minister Sergei Ivanov
thanked them for their courage and honour, characteristic
of Russian officers before announcing that their flight
would be the last flight from Georgia this year.
Postal services have also been suspended and money transfers
are under threat. Some Georgian businesses in Moscow have been
shut down, including a Georgian-owned hotel and casino that was
accused of money laundering.
Russian lawmakers are set to debate whether to bar Georgians
living in Russia from cabling remittances home. Possibly as many
as one million Georgians live and work in Russia (Georgias
population is only 4.5 million). They send back to the Caucasus
state an estimated $1.5 to $2 billion a year, an amount comparable
to Georgias entire state budget.
The Georgian economy is already labouring under a Russian ban
on its top three agricultural exportswine, mineral water
and mandarin oranges. The punitive measures imposed upon Georgia
will last indefinitely, according to Defence Minister Sergei Ivanov.
The OSCE, the European Union and the United States have called
upon Moscow to reverse the punitive sanctions.
Russias conflict with Georgia threatens to plunge the
peoples of the South Caucasus into a bloody conflagration. It
is difficult to ascertain if in arresting the four officers Georgia
acted with Washingtons agreement, or to what extent it was
Washington that encouraged it to back down. In either case, Georgia
would be acting as a regional proxy for the US in pursuit of its
geo-political interests in the region.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has blamed the US and
NATO for the crisis, and declared, We are worried by the
anti-Russian rhetoric coming from the Georgian leadership in terms
that imply Russia is an enemy. He noted that Georgias
provocations had intensified since Saakashvilli visited
Washington and said that he considered Georgias plans for
membership in NATO to be the real catalyst for the current crisis.
Agreement was reached between NATO and Georgia last month on
intensified dialogue as a first step towards membership.
The US and Britain had earlier blocked a Russian draft United
Nations Security Council statement rebuking Georgia for its provocation
and its stationing of troops in the breakaway province of Abkhazia.
US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack, speaking on September
29, said US authorities believed the issue did not require the
attention of the UN and that the two sides should settle the issue
themselves. Responding to press queries concerning the role of
the Bush administration in recent events, he said, Ive
heard news reports of all the, you know, various conspiracy theories
involving the United States and the hidden hand of
the United States. Just frankly not true.
For his part, Saakashvilli said, Some people could consider
our action as something that has been coordinated by Washington.
This is not true.
However, such denials carry little weight. Georgian sources
continually boast of US support while Russian sources routinely
denounce it.
Georgian political analyst Ramaz Sakvatrelidze wrote, We
are not alone. There are many other countries opposing Russia.
We are engaged in a difficult political fight, but we are supported
as we are Russias opponent. Gia Khukhashvili, writing
in Rezonansi, insisted that The United States is
clearly a strategic partner of ours and it has proved this on
a number of occasions through its support. We would have found
ourselves in a most difficult situation today without it.
Sergy Strokan commented in Russias Kommersant:
Georgiaand not Georgia aloneis guaranteed massive
American support in the near future. The guarantee of this lies
in the new rivalry between Moscow and Washington, through the
prism of which one increasingly regards events involving third
countries. It does not matter any more whether it is about Georgia
or Ukraine, Syria or Iran, China or Venezuela. Russian-American
relations, which are returning to the principle of an eye for
an eye, have become a key to understanding a large part of international
politics.
Members of the Russian parliament have called for direct military
action against Georgia. Speaker of the upper house Sergei Mironov
described the spying charges as either a load of bull or
a peculiar pre-emptive strike on Russia.
Russia has 4,000 troops at two military bases within Georgia.
A further 2,500 are deployed within Georgias two breakaway
provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Prior to the release
of the four officers, the commander of Russian forces within Georgia,
General Andrei Popov, authorised the use of deadly forceshoot-to-killto
counter any Georgian aggression.
Russia is intent on facing down what it sees as a US-inspired
challenge to its authority in an area long viewed as its sphere
of influence.
Last Sunday, before the release of the officers, Putin held
an urgent meeting with ministers, leaders of the armed forces
and heads of the intelligence services to discuss Russias
response to the arrests. Directing his ire at Washington, he stated,
These people think that under the roof of their foreign
sponsors they can feel comfortable... is it really so?
Responding to Georgias declared intent to join NATO,
Defence Minister Ivanov said on September 22, We are actively
developing two alpine brigades with the latest equipment. Both
brigades will be stationed right by the border with Georgia. Therefore,
Russian security will not suffer if Georgia joins NATO.
The Georgian leadership has accused Moscow of supporting the
breakaway provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Putin met with
Sergei Bagapsh and Eduard Kokity, the respective leaders of the
two regions, on September 30 in the Black Sea resort of Sochi,
which borders Georgia, at what was described as an investment
forum.
A great deal is at stake in this conflict. The South Caucasus
region is a geographic fulcrum for the entire Eurasian landmass.
Georgia sits atop the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline running
from the Caspian Sea in Azerbaijan and ending on the Turkish Mediterranean
coast. It is situated between the Black and Caspian Seas on the
immediate periphery of the Middle East and Central Asia, where
the overwhelming majority of remaining energy reserves are located.
The US government is determined to secure its control over
Caspian oil and gas, which make up 3-4 percent of world reserves.
But Russia has demonstrated that it is just as determined to hold
onto them.
See Also:
A tale of two elections: the
US and Ukraine in 2004
[14 September 2006]
Tensions between Georgia and
Russia escalate
[21 August 2006]
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