The Bush
administration appears to have pulled off its latest military
fiasco in the Caucasus. What was supposed to have been a swift
and painless takeover of rebellious South Ossetia by America’s
favorite new ally, Georgia, has turned into a disaster that
left Georgia battered, Russia enraged, and NATO badly demoralized.
Not bad for two days work.
Equally
important, Russia’s Vladimir Putin swiftly and decisively checkmated
the Bush administration’s clumsy attempt last week to expand
US influence into the Caucasus, and made the Americans and their
Georgian satraps look like fools.
We are
not facing a return to the Cold War yet. But the current US-Russian
crisis over Georgia, a tiny nation of only 4.6 million, and
its linkage to a US anti-ballistic missile system in Eastern
Europe, is deeply worrying and increasingly dangerous.
On 7 August,
Georgia’s president, Mikheil Saakashvili, ordered his US and
Israeli-advised and equipped army to invade the breakaway region
of South Ossetia, which has been struggling for independence
from Georgia since 1992. Most of its people were Russian citizens
who wanted union with Russian North Ossetia.
If not
directly behind Georgia’s invasion of South Ossetia, Washington
had to have been at least fully aware of Saakashvili’s plans.
The Georgian Army was trained and equipped by US and Israeli
military advisors stationed with its troops down to battalion
level. CIA and Israel’s Mossad operated important intelligence
stations in Tbilisi and coordinated plans with Saakashvili,
whose political opponents have long accused him of being very
close to CIA and the Pentagon.
Georgia’s
attack on South Ossetia was launched while the world was absorbed
by the Beijing Olympics, and Prime Minister Putin was in the
Chinese capital. The attack was clearly planned to be a lightening
strike that would occupy all of South Ossetia and then Abkhazia
before Moscow could react, presenting the Kremlin with a fait
accompli.
Who in
Bush’s or Cheney’s office approved this stupid adventure? Why
did the very smart Israelis get sucked into this imbroglio?
Saakashvili’s
stealth "coup de main" quickly turned into a disaster.
Russia’s 58th Army responded by routing Georgian
forces and delivering a humiliating strategic and psychological
blow to the Bush administration. Saakashvili fell right into
Moscow’s trap.
Georgia
and Russia have been feuding since 1992 over two Georgian ethnic
enclaves, South Ossetia and Abkhazia, whose people differ in
ethnicity and language from Georgians and who wanted to rejoin
Russia.
The young,
US-educated Saakashvili became Georgia’s president in 2003 after
an uprising, believed organized by CIA and financed by US money,
overthrew the former leader, Eduard Shevardnadze. I came to
know and respect Shevardnadze in Moscow when he was Mikhail
Gorbachev’s principal ally and architect of Soviet reform.
Had the
able, clever Shevardnadze still been in power, this misadventure
would never have happened.
Saakashvili
quickly became the golden boy of US rightwing neoconservatives
and their Israeli allies, who held him a model of how to turn
former Russian-dominated states into "democratic"
US allies. Georgian critics claim Saakashvili kept power by
intimidation, bribery, and vote rigging. The youthful Georgian
leader, his head swelled by promises of US support and NATO
membership, launched a war of words against Moscow.
Amazingly,
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, a supposed Russian expert,
even publicly assured Saakashvili that the US would "fight"
for Georgia. Washington’s latest fiasco falls squarely into
her lap.
US money,
military trainers, advisers, and intelligence agents poured
into the former Soviet Republic of Georgia. Israeli arms dealers,
businessmen and intelligence agents quickly followed, reportedly
selling some $200 million or more of military equipment to the
Georgian government.
By expanding
its influence into Georgia, the Bush administration brazenly
flouted agreements with Moscow made by president George H.W.
Bush not to expand NATO into the former USSR. President Bill
Clinton and George W. Bush both violated this pact. Under the
feeble Yeltsin regime, bankrupt Russia could do nothing. But
under Putin, newly wealthy Russia finally pushed back after
a long series of provocations fromWashington.
Russia’s
tough deputy prime minister, Sergei Ivanov, sneeringly observed
that Georgia had become a "US satellite." He was absolutely
right. And Ivanov, a former KGB colleague of Vlad Putin, knows
a satellite when he sees one. Georgia provided the US oil and
gas pipeline routes from Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan
that bypassed Russian territory. Russia was furious its Caspian
Basin energy export monopoly had been broken, vowing revenge.
Now that
the Russians have checkmated the US and client Georgia, South
Ossetia and Abkhazia will likely move into Russia’s orbit. The
west rightly backed independence of Kosovo from Serbia. The
peoples of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, who are ethnically and
linguistically different from Georgians, should have as much
right to secede from Georgia.
Besides
thwarting Bush’s clumsy attempt to further advance US influence
into Russia’s Caucasian underbelly, Putin delivered a stark
warning to Ukraine and the Central Asian states: don’t get too
close to Washington. Putin put the US on the strategic defensive
and showed that NATO’s new eastern reaches – the Baltic, Bulgaria,
Romania, and the Caucasus – are largely indefensible.
It’s a
good thing Georgia was not admitted to NATO, as the White House
had reportedly promised Saakashvili. Had Georgia been admitted
before this crisis, the US and its NATO allies would have been
in a state of war with Russia. Disturbingly, Germany’s conservative
prime minister, Angelika Merkel, rushed to Tbilisi to assure
Saakashvili that her nation still backed NATO membership for
Georgia.
Is the
west really ready to be dragged into a potential nuclear war
for the sake of South Ossetia? Are American and German troops
ready to fight in the Caucasus? Georgia is a bridge too far
for NATO.
President
George Bush, VP Dick Cheney and Sen. John McCain all resorted
to table pounding and Cold War rhetoric against Russia. McCain,
whose senior foreign policy advisor is a neoconservative and
was a registered lobbyist for Georgia, demanded that the US
and NATO "punish" Russia and put it into diplomatic
isolation.
Unfortunately,
the indignant John McCain’s could not even properly pronounce
"Abkhazia."
America’s
neocon amen chorus demanded a confrontation with Russia, chanting
their usual mantras about Munich, appeasement and the myths
of World War II. One certainly wondered if the Caucasian fracas
was not staged by the Republicans to provide Sen. McCain with
the "three a.m. phone call" he has been longing for
and a chance to sound tough. This he did, even though his rhetoric
was empty and his solutions vapid. Barack Obama ducked the issue
or issued a few tepid bromides about halting "Russian aggression."
Meanwhile,
hypocrisy flew thicker than shellfire. Bush, who ordered the
invasion of Afghanistan, Iraq and Somalia, and is threatening
war against Iran, accused Russia of "bullying" and
"aggression." Putin, who crushed the life out of Chechnya’s
independence movement, piously claimed his army was saving Ossetians
from Georgian ethnic cleansing and protecting their quest for
independence.
Bush
and McCain demand Russia be punished and isolated. The humiliated
Bush is sending some US troops to Georgia to deliver "humanitarian"
aid. Equally worrisome, the US rushed to sign a pact with Warsaw
to station anti-missile missiles and anti-aircraft batteries,
manned by US troops, in Poland. This response is dangerous,
highly provocative, and immature. The next president will have
to deal with the Bush administrations reckless and foolish acts
in the Mideast, Eastern Europe, Afghanistan and now, the Caucasus
The
west must accept Russia has vital national interests in the
Caucasus and the former USSR. Russia is a great power and must
be afforded respect. The days of treating Russia like a banana
republic are over. Have we learned nothing from World War I
or II, both of which began with flare-ups in obscure Sarajevo
and the Danzig Corridor?
The US’s
most important foreign policy concern is keeping correct relations
with Russia, which has thousands of nuclear warheads pointed
at North America. Georgia is a petty sideshow. US missiles in
Poland and radars in the Czech Republic are a dangerous, unnecessary
provocation that is sowing dragon’s teeth for future confrontation.