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Caucasian Games: The Score
Chronicles ^ | 8/16/08 | Chronicles

Posted on 08/16/2008 6:22:39 PM PDT by Thorin

Caucasian Games: The Score by Srdja Trifkovic

A week after Georgia’s failed attempt to conquer the breakaway province of South Ossetia, the crisis is over. The only major issue still unresolved concerns Mikheil Saakashvili’s motivation. His order to attack on the night of August 7-8 was a breathtakingly risky move; but was it a calculated, or reckless gamble? That Saakashvili acted with the tacit approval (if not active encouragement) of the United States is reasonable to assume, considering the presence of over a hundred U.S. military advisors in Georgia. Actively involved at all levels of planning, training and equipping the Georgian army, they could not have not known what was coming. Had the Bush administration wanted to stop Saakashvili it could have done so.

It did not do so, however, because the foreign policy strategists in Washington—Russophobic to boot—assumed that they had a win-win situation:

Had Georgian troops occupied Southern Ossetia in a Blitzkrieg operation modelled after Croatia’s “Operation Storm” that expelled a quarter-million Krajina Serbs in August 1995, while the Russians remained hesitant or ineffective, Moscow would have suffered a major strategic and (more importantly) psychological defeat after almost four years of sustained strategic recovery following the “Orange Revolution” in Ukraine in 2004. On the other hand, if Russia were to intervene the mainstream media machine would duly react with a campaign of demonization unseen since at least August 1968 (Prague), if not August 1961 (Berlin Wall). The U.S. would block Russia’s entry into the WTO, try to suspend her G-8 membership, and retroactively justify the deployment of missile defense systems in Poland and the Czech Republic. “Old” Europeans, above all Germans, would be forced to abandon their détente with Moscow. Last but not least, a bloodied, resentful Georgia would become chronically anti-Russian, regardless of Saakashvili’s personal fortunes, thus ensuring long-term “Western” (i.e. American) presence in the region. In the event the plan did not work:

The Georgian army performed so poorly in the field that a military fait accompli on Day One was out of the question. It could not even secure the Ossetian capital, Tskhinvali, which lay virtually undefended within miles of the Georgian border. It promptly committed atrocities that made the innocent-victim-of-aggression narrative somewhat difficult to construct even for the likes of The Post or CNN. The Russian response came swiftly, indicating that the new tandem Medvedev-Putting acts in unison when setting political objectives and functions smoothly in achieving them. The military action was executed competently and achieved all its objectives within 48 hours, in sharp contrast with the protracted and bloodly stalemate in Chechnya a decade ago, let alone the Afghan quagmire in the 1980s. Moscow stopped short of taking the whole of Georgia and effecting a regime change in Tbilisi, while demonstrating its ability to do so—thus creating room for third-party diplomatic initiatives based on Russia’s position of overwhelming strength. The Europeans went out of their way to keep their dialogue with Moscow open, brokering a ceasefire pleasing to Moscow (Sarkozy) and maintaining the schedule of previously announced top-level contacts (Merkel). NATO’s expansion eastwards is now finally over: no major European member of the alliance, with the possible exception of the ever-pliant Britain, accepts Bush’s argument that vital Western interests are at stake in whose flag flies over Tskhinvali. Kosovo did establish a precedent, after all, the one that Mosow will exploit to its advantage while making Washington sound hypocritical when invoking “international law” and the respect for territorial integrity of states. Stretched to the limit in Iraq and Afghanistan, the United States responded with Miss Rice’s forgettable platitudes in Tbilisi, thus implicitly admitting Washington’s inability to intervene along the Russian periphery. Back to Saakashvili. If he acted in the hope of a decisive political and even military American response to Russia’s predictable reaction, he is naive. If he willingly accepted the role of collateral damage in the scenario of discrediting Russia, he is stupid. And if he thought that he could do a Tudjman with impunity, he is insane.

The events in the Caucasus clearly indicate to small and weak countries that it is self-defeating to trust a distant mentor in Washington whose verbal commitments greatly exceede available resources. The outcome is a blessing in disguise for those of us who believe that America should not be “engaged” in each nook and cranny around the world, and who advocate a sane, give-and-take relationship with Moscow based on the acceptance that Russia has legitimate interests in her near-abroad.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Russia
KEYWORDS: caucasus; geopolitics; georgia; russia; southossetia

1 posted on 08/16/2008 6:22:39 PM PDT by Thorin
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To: Thorin

The Russians had the operation ready to go before the Georgians made their move. They were coming off July military maneuvers in which a lot of their top-line units & latest equipment was employed. Another tip-off was the speed & size of the reaction. That wasn’t a bunch of Class III border troops we saw driving old T-54 tanks.


2 posted on 08/16/2008 6:36:13 PM PDT by Tallguy ("The sh- t's chess, it ain't checkers!" -- Alonzo (Denzel Washington) in "Training Day")
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To: Thorin

As I understand it, the US trainers in Georgia advised against the Georgian attack into South Ossetia precisely because they feared the Russians would use it as a pretext for aggression. But I don’t think anybody, except for the Russians, realized the scale of the Russian counter strike.


3 posted on 08/16/2008 6:36:41 PM PDT by GreenLanternCorps (No Surrender, No Retreat!!! Only one candidate will win the war, and it's not Barack Obama!)
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To: Thorin

So that’s the party line from the paleo-con-populists, huh? Pretty weak sauce. A couple of points. 1) Russia has a long history of invading and murdering her neighbors. This is more of the same. 2) The rationale for Russia is money. High oil prices to be specific. The destruction of the oil pipeline was a primary war goal, and the “plight” of the Russian ethnics “living” in Georgia was merely an excuse. 3) Americans hate bullies, and we have a long history of correctly characterizing the Russian empire (of which the CCCP was but one incarnation, wrapped in a strategic deception which actually fooled no one [namely, the benevolence and historical inevitability of communism]) as bullies. 4) Hopefully this will be the mistake that leads to the fall of Putinism in Russia. 5) In the mean time the US should in conjunction with eastern Europe and the Ukraine, take the appropriate actions based on lessons learned from Russian aggression.


4 posted on 08/16/2008 6:41:58 PM PDT by RKV (He who has the guns makes the rules)
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To: kristinn

Ping


5 posted on 08/16/2008 6:53:03 PM PDT by Navy Patriot (John McCain, the Manchurian Candidate.)
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To: Thorin
Kosovo did establish a precedent, after all, the one that Moscow will exploit to its advantage while making Washington sound hypocritical when invoking “international law” and the respect for territorial integrity of states.

Clinton, the gift that keeps on giving.

6 posted on 08/16/2008 7:00:18 PM PDT by Navy Patriot (John McCain, the Manchurian Candidate.)
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To: RKV
Haven't read Chronicles for over a year after canceling because of articles like this gloating over perceived American over reach. This article just reminds me it was the right decision.
7 posted on 08/16/2008 7:01:45 PM PDT by mick
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To: RKV
Somewhere in all this is a good end game for the West and the former Eastern block states that have joined the West. The small states in the area don't really like each other and they know that they can not defend them self's against Imperial Russia. Turkey can not be too happy about all of this. They need the oil and gas. They have a big very, more or less professional army, they are a member of NATO (for what that is worth) and the army does not like the Russians. Turkey has a problem with the PKK and some of the Kurds. We have some leverage with some of the Kurds. The gas that passed through the BTC pipeline came from “brother” Muslim countries which can not be any too happy about again seeing Imperial Russia trying to dictate to them. If a common self defense treaty can be created among these small states, together with Turkey, then they have a chance of stopping Imperial Russia
8 posted on 08/16/2008 7:11:14 PM PDT by WellyP
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To: Thorin
When it comes to Georgia and other geopolitical issues, I can't lend much credence to paleoconservative magazines such as Chronicles and The American Conservative.
9 posted on 08/16/2008 7:16:10 PM PDT by Ebenezer (Strength and Honor!)
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To: Thorin
The real puzzling question is why did Georgia attack. There were rockets going back and forth but that had been happening for years. And it must have been a fairly significant attack to drive 30,000 South Odessans into Russia.

Russia obviously knew they were going to do it and no doubt the US did too. The only guess I can make is they did not expect the Russians to respond.
10 posted on 08/16/2008 7:32:35 PM PDT by microgood
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To: Thorin

Ok, we have Lyndon LaRouche’s opinion posted and now this guy.... whoever he is. I reserve my judgment, however, until we are blessed with Calypso Louis’ thoughts on the subject of Russian-Georgian war. I kindly hope that such post is forthcoming.


11 posted on 08/16/2008 7:38:06 PM PDT by alecqss
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To: microgood
The real puzzling question is why did Georgia attack.

They didn't; a lot of the "facts" of what happened in Georgia are leaving out the earlier events that started the conflict. One poster did an excellent job of cataloging those events:

What really happened

12 posted on 08/16/2008 7:51:31 PM PDT by Technogeeb (The only good Russian is a dead Russian. Rest in Peace, Solzhenitsyn.)
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To: microgood
Russia obviously knew they were going to do it and no doubt the US did too. The only guess I can make is they did not expect the Russians to respond.

Want to really bend your mind? How about this "conspiracy theory"? Both the US & Russia wanted the current situation & each made moves to bring it about.

I have no real evidence to point to except there are some relatively positive outcomes for the US.

1. Poland has dropped its tough negotiating position re: Theater Missile Defense. They've totally capitulated & are going to sign an agreement to base interceptor missiles on Polish soil.

2. The Dollar/Euro relationship is likely to flip due to Europes weakness in energy security. Russia will play games now that they control all the pipelines.

3. NATO just got a 'wakeup call'. This may have positive results for Afghanistan where we need more troops.

I'm not suggesting that the US egged Georgia on. I'm merely saying that given the Ossetian rocket attacks Georgia was bound to act and everybody knew it.

13 posted on 08/18/2008 5:02:51 AM PDT by Tallguy ("The sh- t's chess, it ain't checkers!" -- Alonzo (Denzel Washington) in "Training Day")
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