RFE/RL -
10.26.2001
Radio
Free Europe/Radio Liberty
Caucases
Conflicts Eclipsed by World Focus on Afghanistan
By
Richard Giragosian
Overshadowed
by ongoing U.S.-led military antiterrorism strikes against Afghanistan
and the intense diplomatic consultations on cooperation between world
powers to counter global terrorism, rising tensions in the South
Caucasus threaten to create yet another front of instability where a new
outbreak of hostilities would have significant implications extending
beyond the regional borders. A new war in the Caucasus would not only
threaten to destabilize the broader Caspian Basin, but could present a
challenge to the emerging U.S.-Russian strategic partnership.
Demonstrating
the linkage of the conflicts in the Caucasus, the recent clashes in the
breakaway Georgian region of Abkhazia reportedly involve a force of
several hundred made up of ethnic Georgians allied with Chechen rebels.
Although geographically limited to the Kodori gorge of Abkhazia, the
fighting has already claimed the lives of more than fifty ethnic Greek,
Armenian, and Abkhaz villagers, as well as five United Nations
observers.
Although
serious questions over the Russian and/or Georgian roles in this crisis
remain unanswered, it seems evident that the situation may very well
lead to a clash of interests among the various regional powers. One
possible analysis points to an attempt by the Georgian leadership to
utilize Chechen fighters and guerrillas recruited from the ranks of
Georgian displaced persons from Abkhazia as part of a broad campaign to
retake control over much of the breakaway region. However, such a
scenario is a dangerous gambit for Georgia, as it already seems evident
that the conflict has spiraled beyond the ability of the Georgian
military to effectively contain the situation. The key question remains
as to how these fighters were able to travel undetected for nearly 500
kilometers from their base in the Pankisi gorge, infiltrating Georgian
territory prior to launching raids on Abkhaz villages.
The
Georgian government has long been criticized by Russia for being
unwilling or unable to halt Chechen operations from its territory and
this new outbreak may offer Russian hard-liners a fresh justification
for intervening. In perhaps the most serious confrontation between
Moscow and Tbilisi in several years, this Abkhaz crisis poses a serious
test of the firmness of the newly revised Russian foreign policy and may
test the very survival of the Georgian government. Although as of 18
October the fighting appeared to have abated, a Georgian military
contingent remains in the upper reaches of the Kodori gorge and the
Abkhaz anticipate that that force may launch a new attack. Meanwhile,
further complicating the situation, Abkhaz leaders have added a new
dimension to the conflict by calling for an association agreement with
the Russian Federation.
Responding
to the Abkhaz crisis, on 12 October Russian President Vladimir Putin
announced a backing-off policy, pledging noninterference in Georgia's
"internal affairs" and offering to withdraw the 2,000 Russian
troops deployed along the border between Abkhazia and the rest of
Georgia as part of the Commonwealth of Independent States' (CIS)
peacekeeping mandate. Although seemingly a reflection of the overall new
westward orientation of Russian foreign policy, it seems more likely to
be central to a strategy exploiting the increasing vulnerability of the
Georgian state. That interpretation is reinforced by the recent
deployment of Russian troops along the Russian border with Georgia, a
move cloaked in the veil of a defensive response, yet undoubtedly seen
by Tbilisi as an exercise in intimidation.
Meanwhile,
the chances of a political settlement of the Karabakh conflict appear to
be receding, while a resumption of hostilities appears increasingly
possible. Driven by a series of aggressive statements by Azerbaijani
officials and politicians threatening to retake Nagorno-Karabakh by
force, tension has escalated in recent weeks as Armenia and Azerbaijan
traded diplomatic barbs, with each branding the other as a terrorist
state.
Azerbaijan
has sought to utilize the shifting geopolitical landscape by arguing
that it has a right to embark on an "antiterror" campaign of
its own directed at retaking control of Nagorno-Karabakh. For its part,
Armenia has branded Azerbaijan as a haven for operatives for Osama Bin
Laden, exaggerating the putative Azerbaijani connection to international
terrorism. Such diplomacy, to the detriment of these states, has only
tended to contribute to a "culture of conflict."
Possibly
the most disturbing factor of the developments of the last few weeks is
that the geopolitical status quo in the South Caucasus is so tenuous
that it can be destabilized by a mere handful of freebooters in the case
of Georgia, and incautious militant rhetoric in Azerbaijan.
That
dangerous momentum toward conflict demonstrates the need for the new
U.S.-Russian cooperative relationship to initiate a coordinated response
to stabilize the Caucasus, at least by trying to kick start the stalled
mediation efforts of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE). As two of the three co-chairs of the OSCE's Minsk Group
mediating the Karabakh conflict, Moscow and Washington should recognize
the interrelationship and interdependence of instability on both sides
of the Caspian Sea. Similarly, as members of the "Friends of
Georgia" group, the U.S. and Russia could, and should, induce the
UN Security Council to place Abkhazia higher on its list of priorities.
Richard
Giragosian is a Washington-based regional analyst and publisher of the
monthly newsletter "TransCaucasus: A Chronology." (giragosi@email.msn.com)