The chickens come home to roost in Georgia

Posted August 22, 2008 on 1:57 am | In the category U.S. Foreign Policy, International Broadcasting, Russia | by Mackenzie Brothers

It did not take long for the chickens of Kosovo to find a splendid first roosting place in Georgia. When the topic of independence for Kosovo came up only a few short months ago, red warning flags were flying in many quarters from those with knowledge and experience of ethnic conflicts in the powder kegs of the Balkans and the Caucasus Mountains. Many countries, like Canada, took a long time before agreeing to recognize an independent Kosovo fostered by the United States, and a fair number still don’t, because they see the danger to their own national boundaries. A periphery province of a legally established national state with internationally recognized borders was declaring its independence from the much larger state to which it legally belonged. What would happen in France, Spain, Italy or the United States if such a situation arose at home? Not to mention China.

The reason was simple; after long standing violent conflicts between the two ethnic groups of that breakaway state, powerful outside nations took the side of the ethnic group that it felt was under almost genocidal attack by the mother state, which they then bombed unmercifully. This was Serbia in the late 1990s as NATO troops punished it for its atrocities against the Albanian ethic group of Kosovo. But it is also way too close for comfort for the situation in Georgia and its illegal breakaway republics with a large Russian majority, the Georgians having decided it was safer to leave. But this time, it was the US-sponsored Georgian army that took on the role of the Serbian aggressor, as it attacked the breakaway provinces. And who should come rushing to the defence of the poor threatened minority ethnic group but Tsar Putin, who must have thought he was dreaming when he saw that his increasingly dopey rivals had presented him with the opportunity to defend Russians (since he had given most of them Russian passports) under attack while at the same time squashing a tiny annoying tick on the skin of the Russian bear. So that of course is what happened. Poor Condoleeza Rice, sent out on a Don Quixote mission to chastise (and absurdly threaten?) the Russians for doing exactly what the US had done in Serbia less than ten years before, must be wishing her next job involves dealing with fractious faculty clubs, because she has served an extraordinarily foolish master for too long to retain her own dignity. Wasn’t she early on in her diplomatic career supposed to be an expert on Russia? How could anyone mess up the Russian desk in only 8 years as much as she has?

The result is a clear demonstration of renewed Russian power (and threat) along all its borders, a completely crushed and bankrupt exotic ally of the US which somehow misinterpreted US bluster for true support, and a really serious impediment to the free flow of essential Asian natural gas and oil to European consumers. Now we can wait to see if all of those countries who pushed for an independent Kosovo are as quick to recognize the new state of South Ossetia. Wanna bet?

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  1. “I looked the man in the eye. I found him to be very straightforward and trustworthy….I was able to get a sense of his soul.” —George W. Bush, after meeting Russian President Vladimir Putin, June 16, 2001

    “We certainly would not want to have same kind of democracy as they have in Iraq, quite honestly.” Vladimir Putin

    Bob and Doug are again on top of their game. There is much hand-wringing over Russia’s military adventure in S. Ossitia and Georgia in the U.S. press but much of the discussion can be characterized as holier-than-thou hypocrisy with minimum recognition of the complexities in the matter. Senator McCain’s response (“Today we are all Georgians.”) is illustrative of the tendency of simplistic thinkers to become caught up in an emotional response to what is, after all, a very complex situation in which a high stakes and unnecessary risk by the President of Georgia and the naiveté of the Bush administration’s foreign policy play a major role.

    In addition to the U.S.’s support of Kosovo’s secession from Serbia, which provides existential permission for South Ossitia and Abkhazia to secede from Georgia, the breast-beating about Russia invading a sovereign state begs the question of what right the U.S. had to invade Iraq? The U.S. has played bully for nearly eight years under Bush and is reaping the consequences.

    As for Secretary Rice, this is a woman who ignored explicit warnings about al Quada prior to 9/11, supported the Iraq invasion by suggesting Iraq would soon be dropping nuclear bombs, and stood by while her boss gazed lovingly into Putin’s soul. She has been a major architect of the foolishness and arrogance of baiting the bear with offers of NATO membership for Georgia and Ukraine and signing deals for missiles in Poland and radar in the Czech Republic. This has brought the U.S. a foreign policy disaster, which could end up threatening the cohesion of NATO while it strengthens Russia’s position in the region and weakens America’s ability to positively influence world affairs. None of this needed to happen.

    Comment by jeff — August 23, 2008 #

  2. The one quote from Condi Rice that captured the Bush Administration’s foolishness was when she told Georgia, prior to it’s incursion into South Ossetia, that America “fights for its friends”. In went Georgia and the disaster unfolded. Her incompetent diplomacy reminds me of the US ambassador to Iraq telling Saddam that his problem with Kuwait in the early 1990s was “an internal problem” implying that he was free to do what he eventually did. That occurred in the first Bush’s Adminstration. The son apparently learned something from his old man. The problem is he doesn’t have the sense to know the good from the bad or the right from wrong.

    Comment by John — August 31, 2008 #

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