Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 6 – Despite
suggestions by analysts like Sergey Markedonov that the 2008 Russian-Georgia
war is over (vedomosti.ru/opinion/articles/2018/08/03/777285-voina-080808), Moscow’s aggression against Georgia which began long
before 2008 shows no sign of ending anytime soon.
Indeed, as the tenth anniversary of
the Russian invasion approaches, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev has
openly threatened Georgia with disastrous consequences if it continues its
efforts to join NATO (tass.ru/politika/5431729), and polls
show that Russians accept the Kremlin’s version of events that Georgia, not
Russia, is responsible for the conflict.
According
to a new Levada Center poll, in fact, only one Russian in 20 thinks that Moscow was responsible for the
2008 conflict and its consequences, even though the facts of the case are that
Russian forces invaded and occupied Georgian territory rather than the other
way around (rbc.ru/politics/06/08/2018/5b67e0839a79474cd27230cf?from=main).
Russian economist and commentator
Andrey Illarionov offers a useful list of ten reasons why those like Markedonov
who argue that the war is over are wrong and why the war continues and is
likely to continue well into the future (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5B6729705FF9B).
These include:
1.
Markedonov
et al refuse to call the war what it in fact was, “a Russian-Georgian war,”
lest by doing so they call attention to the “aggressive” nature and continuing
quality of the conflict.
2.
They
act as if the war is “finished” when in fact there has been no peace agreement
and when in fact after the more open phase of the war was concluded, Russian
military forces have taken over control of an additional 103 Georgian villages.
3.
Such
people invariably seek to equate the situation of Abkhazia and South Ossetia
with that of Kosovo, which they argue is “a precedent” for what Moscow did,
even though the situation is entirely different and even though Kosovo has
attracted near total international recognition while Abkhazia and South Ossetia
have not.
4.
They
ignore Russian military actions after the ceasefire, actions that have expanded
Russia’s zone of control on Georgian territory.
5.
Such analysts equate Russia’s military presence in
Abkhazia and South Ossetia with those of the US and the EU in Georgia, ignoring
the fact that Russian now “occupies 20 percent of Georgia’s territory” while
neither the US nor the EU has established a single base in Georgia.
6.
Markedonov and his kind engage in blaming the victim by
arguing that Tbilisi was responsible for the war even though it did not invade
anyone and Russia was somehow an innocent bystander even though it did
7.
They suggest that Georgia fired the first shot even
though investigations show that it was Russia not Georgia that did so.
8.
Markedonov et al, Illarionov says, talk about changing
borders with such ease that they fail to recognize that their words highlight
Russian imperial views that the borders of all neighboring states are up for
grabs if Moscow thinks they are.
9.
They implicitly suggest that more border changes are
thus ahead, not only in Georgia but elsewhere as well.
10. And
such writers ignore the reality that whatever problems Georgia and the other
“new states” have with democracy, their achievements in that sector are far
greater than are those of Russia which is a democracy in name only.
In concluding his article, Illarionov says that
“the Russian-Georgian war of course will end. But it will end not as those in
today’s Kremlin suppose. It will end with the signing of a peace treaty between
free Russia and free Georgia about the restoration of an internationally
recognized border between the two countries.”
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