The pending
appeal of the President of South Ossetia, Eduard Kokoity, to the
Russian Federation's Constitutional Court may trigger a
destabilizing chain of events in the Caucasus. Kokoity, who is
totally dependent on the Kremlin, would not have asked for such a
radical step if he wasn't encouraged from the highest level in
Moscow.
If such developments spin out of control, they can cause a
Russian-Georgian military confrontation with unpredictable
consequences for the region and the world.
My recent meetings in Moscow and Washington indicate that
Russian-Georgian relations have deteriorated to the point where
some officials in the Kremlin are seriously looking for a pretext
to start a military operation to topple Georgian President Mikheil
Saakashvili.
Two Moscow insiders - a veteran senior foreign policy adviser who
often informally speaks for the Kremlin, and a prominent Duma
member who specializes in foregin affairs -- said that the February
statement by the Kremlin political strategist Gleb Pavlovsky about
a possibility of Saakashvili;s assassination is more than a boast.
It's a warning.
"It's springtime -- a time to start a war with Georgia," said the
foreign policy adviser. He specifically mentioned Ossetia, (and not
secessionist Abkhazia), as the future flashpoint.
Georgians are persistently irritating Russia by successfully
negotiating withdrawal of Russian military bases and appealing to
join NATO. The Georgian Parliament is likely to vote to demand
withdrawal of Russian peacekeepers from Abkhazia and Ossetia.
Saakashvili wrote to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan asking to
"internationalize" peacekeeping operations in Abkhazia and
Ossetia.
Christian Ossetians, say the Russians, hold Russian citizenship
and want to join their brethren in North Ossetia, which is a part
of the Russian Federation. "Saakashvili is out of control, and
needs to be brought to heel," said the Russian foreign policy
expert. "If Georgians keep quiet and behave, we may even tolerate
their joining NATO, but if they are loud, we'll take measures," he
added.
However, other Moscow-based analysts pointed out that this rhetoric
is very similar to invective against the previous Georgian
president, Eduard Shevardnadze. "Russia needs to realize that it
has a problem with Georgia, not with Saakashvili or Shevardnadze,"
said a prominent foreign policy magazine editor.
If Kokoity's appeal to the Russian Constitutional Court, which is
not known for its independence from the executive branch, is
accepted and is followed by a referendum on formal secession and
ascending to Russia, Georgia might take military measures to
prevent its disintegration. But such steps, Moscow hopes, may
trigger a massive response by Ossetians supported by "volunteers"
from North Caucasus and beyond.
In addition to Ossetians from the north and south, the two Russian
sources mentioned Ramzan Kadyrov's Chechens. "We armed Ramzan, who
now controls between five and seven thousand bayonets," the Russian
expert said. "He is eager to go to Georgia and fight - all the way
to Tbilisi. He is smelling loot - and Moscow is very uneasy about
his de-facto pro-independence policies," the Russian expert
added.
Georgian officials who are visiting Washington for interagency
meetings to coordinate Georgia's NATO membership application
acknowledged that Russia, upset with Tbilisi's push to receive the
NATO Membership Action Plan in the fall, is planning a
"provocation".
"Russia is focused on the NATO issue in a negative way, which
makes her more aggressive," says Giorgi Manjgaladze, the Georgian
deputy foreign minister, who is managing his country's NATO
accession.
However, Georgia does not desire to be dragged into a military
conflict. "We will protest by diplomatic means, but will not take
military steps if a referendum or other provocation in South
Ossetia takes place," clarifies Nika Rurua, deputy chairman of the
Defense and Security Committee of the Parliament.
All members of the delegation to Washington, including Mamuka
Kudava, first deputy minister of defense, have agreed that their
country is the target of a Russian "black PR campaign". However,
the Georgian delegation followed the advice of Ambassador Juri
Luik, the Estonian envoy to Washington, and the former defense
minister of Estonia, that the best thing is to ignore Russian
threats - just like the Baltic states did in the 1990s.
There is a fundamental difference, however, between the Baltic
accession in 1999 and the case of Georgia. First, Russia was
digging itself from under the rubble of the 1998 economic crisis,
and was in post-Yeltsin transition, and therefore much weaker.
Moscow has not made yet taunting America its foreign policy
priority, despite attempts by then-foreign minister and Prime
Minister Yevgeny Primakov to do just that.
Second, the Kremlin was not seating on a stash of $200 billion
dollars it did not know what to do with. Today, as always,
governments and bureaucracies do things not only because they need
to but because they can.
Third, while Russia is still uneasy about launching the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan main export pipeline (MEP), Gazprom is livid
over the forthcoming Baku-Erzurum gas pipeline, which in the future
may allow Turkmenistan and even Kazakhstan to export gas to Ukraine
and Europe, bypassing the Gazprom pipeline network.
Back in 1999 Europe did not perceive deep dependence on Russian
energy - today it does. However, "the Europeans are concerned about
Russia using energy as a political weapon", says Svante Cornell,
editor of Central Asia and Caucasus Analyst website at the School
of Advanced and International Studies at Johns Hopkins University.
"After Ukraine, such a weapon may backfire."
And finally, the Baltic candidates had a strong and vociferous
support from Poland, Hungary and other Central European countries,
as well as from powerful Central European diasporas in the U.S. -
just before the crucial 2000 presidential elections.
Russia today is dead set on preventing Georgia and Ukraine from
joining NATO. The Russian military feels that it is losing face by
being continuously squeezed out - first from the Georgian military
bases, then from Ossetia and Abkhazia - and eventually, from the
dachas and sanatoria along the Black Sea coast. They may be even
hopeful for promotions, decorations, and bigger budgets if the next
Caucasus war erupts.
Spring is not bringing a sunny political weather to the Caucasus.
Georgia will need all the political wisdom and support from friends
in Washington and elsewhere as it negotiates the latest Ossetian
crisis and the larger Caucasus political minefield.
Ariel
Cohen is research fellow for Russian and Eurasian
studies at the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for
International Studies at the Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in the TCSDaily