Category: Georgia

  • Cultural Influences on Politics in Caspian

    Cultural Influences on Politics in Caspian

    Brenda Shaffer who is an American thinker works to define cultural domination on foreign or domestic affairs of states in the “Is there a Muslim Foreign Policy?”article. Shaffer is explaining this event via some sharp examples. Firstly, Shaffer begin the article with Huntigton’s thesis: “The Clash of Civilizations”. Samuel Huntigton’s thesis follows an idea that culture has a main role in defining of policy. Also Brenda Shaffer agrees thesis of Huntington and creates new approaches about conducts of civilizations and state actions. Shaffer says that culture was a main mechanism to diplomatic relations. Also she interprets culture as specific subject of country’s within religion, history and civilization.

    Western scholars researched about strong Islamic effection in Muslim countries after 11 September terrorist act and looked at Muslim scholars, historians, diplomats and generals who have an extraordinary situation over the people. As a result they understood Islamic effection as strong as nuclear weapons against to the world. But this is not a physical danger, this is an ideological spread. Their speeches to newspapers and political journals which had a title as “Do Muslim countries have a different outlook against Non-Muslim States?”

    On the other hand Shaffer interests about this subject under the psychological perspective. Human beings are often driven by culture according to Shaffer. Also human behavior effects on to state affairs. But state acts partly different from human behaviors. We can give example from philosophical history: Some philosophers think that the state is a thing like human. But it is systematically human as a big organism. State actions have similarities with people actions. State is a big form of human and human is a small form of the state. As behavioral psychological meaning has different dimensions.[1]

    Shaffer gives an example about different state decision-making; some Muslim countries have an anti-American approach as behavioral. But these are making alliance with the USA like Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and Egypt. Commonly we can see inharmonious dimensions between state policies and people behaviors. Caspian perspective of Shaffer has a common beliefs. According to Shaffer, all Caspian countries have been influenced by Islamic effection after from the Soviet Union. Shaffer judges all Caspian and Middle Asian people as Islamic effected nations but it is not totally true if we looked at historical and contemporary situations. Also today these countries are secular except Iran.

    Iran – Politics with Islamic Style

    The Islamic Republic of Iran is an important country in this area as ideological mechanism according to idea of western scholars. After the collapse of the USSR, Iran wanted to export their Islamic regime for other neighbor states via some absolute ways. In Central Asia and Caucasus territory Iran plays to export their Persian Islamic mind as a regime under the title as “Islamic Solidarity” with economic and security events. Western idea is true about activities of this country. But common outlook to Islamic countries of American or Western scholars is different. They agree Islam as a common political tool among all Muslims. Example, Iran works to create an Islamic governing system for all Muslim countries. But Islamic mind of Iran is very different from normal Islamic idea. Persian Islamic system bases on fundamentalist movement. If we look at Turkey, Egypt or Tunis, we could see normal or laic Islamic behavior. Also Shaffer says their false point in next sentence. “Poor Muslim countries have an effective circumstance about this issue but secular Muslim countries challenges to Iran like Turkmenistan.” But Tehran has faced three regional disputes :

    – The Nagorno-Karabagh conflict (Christian Armenia versus Muslim Azerbaijan)

    – The Chechen conflict (Chechen Muslims versus Moscow)

    – The Tajik civil war (The Islamic Renaissance Party versus Moscow)

    In these mix circumstances Iranian fundamentalist approach transformed to self-interest system. An interesting point about is that Iran supports Armenia instead of Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabagh conflict.[2] With these events, Iran state security was challenged in the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia since Iran was a multiethnic state. We give information about Iran’s population: Half of Iran’s population is comprised of non Persian ethnic minorities; Turkmens, Kurds and Azerbaijani groups. Largest minority Azerbaijanis live in northwestern provinces of Iran which bordered with Azerbaijan. Relations of Iran bogged down with Baku because of Iranian self interests.

    Shaffer shows her ideas that Iranian diversity of opinion is a good example to explain Iranian foreign policy. There are some different points as historical legacies and religious differences in policies.

    “On the other hand Turkey attempted to conduct a balanced policy toward both Armenia and Azerbaijan. Also Turkey helped for Karabagh conflict to Baku.”

    Turkey changed its policy when Karabagh became a conflict. It can be an example for cultural combines if western scholars wanted to define their issue. But it cannot be an absolute example about regional cultural alliences subject.

    According to many observers, religious differences have played a central role in the Caspian region. With these circumstances Azerbaijan supported Chechenya. Also some analysts have assumed that religious differences serve as a basis for conflict between Muslim Azerbaijan and Christian Armenia. Over these events, common culture serves as a basic role for alliances and coalitions and different cultures act as an obstacle to cooperation.

    Shaffer’s opinion is that there are cultural alliances are created follow by from collapsing of the USSR.

    Tehran’s main argument is Shiite background in their support system. Also Turkey and Azerbaijan shares ethnic Turkic and Muslim backgrounds. Also Russian and Armenian background is Orthodox Christian form. But Georgian-Russian conflict is different from this event. Shaffer and other western scholars can not define this reality.

    Final

    Culture may be a certain material of regime survivability. Islam can be an effective reason to influence state system and people behavior like speeches of western scholars. Some governments explain and justify their policies in cultural terms. We must analyze a country’s foreign policy on the basis of actions. We have anticipated the New Testament to Germany and Russia or Torah to Israel like Islamic system. Shaffer asks question : “What does the Koran has to say a foreign policy question?” If Islam influences them, they should act with Islamic interaction.

    The USA wants an enemy to rebuild their father emotion on the world. They forced as goodness of the world during the Cold War. They defended the world countries from dangerous communist system. Their interest was communism in that time. But they wanted a new enemy to regulate the world with themselves. After the Cold War, their White House scholars worked for a new enemy establishment. There was a “Red Dangerous” line. But today there should be “Green Dangerous” line. And its name is Islamic effection on politics.[3]

    Fans of the USA defense western style always. There shouldn’t be a religious system like Islam around the world according to them. But they don’t look at Israeli system or American Christiantic base. Main question should be about Western classification about cultural conflicts. There are too many problems about this thesis.

    Today there is a Muslim conflict. And the USA isa  patron of the world. So they are working for peace, democracy and other good things. But the world’s people will know works of the USA. All terror acts, all problems, all ethnic clashes…

     


    [1] Arnold Wolfers, Behavior of States, Dogu Bati Journal – 26, Istanbul 2003

    [2] Karabagh conflict borned in the late 1980. Armenia attacked to the legal boundaries of Azerbaijan.

    [3] Political Declaration Fikret Baskaya – Ideologies, Dogu Bati Journal 2003

    Mehmet Fatih ÖZTARSU

    Baku Qafqaz University

    International Research Club (INTERESCLUB)

  • Culpabilities and Consequences

    Culpabilities and Consequences

    Culpability matters. We cannot be ‘forward-looking’ unless we know who we

    are dealing with, what is driving them and what they are capable of. We also

    need to know ourselves, particularly when we share culpabilities with others.

    Culpabilities are shared in this conflict, but they are different in scale and in

    nature.

    The culpabilities of Georgia’s President, Mikheil Saakashvili, are essentially

    those of temperament. He is ambitious, he is a gambler, and he wraps his

    ego around every problem. When he became President in January 2004, he

    set himself a priority: restoration of Georgia’s territorial integrity; fatefully, he

    also set a deadline: the end of his first term. He totally misjudged the

    correlation of forces and, even less excusably, the mood of Russia. Although

    he understood that Russia had no respect for weakness, he wrongly and

    rashly assumed that it would respect toughness as a substitute for strength.

    Towards the aspirations and apprehensions of Georgia’s de jure citizens in

    Abkhazia and South Ossetia, he showed even less understanding. Finally,

    though the culpability was not exclusively his, he had an existential faith in the

    backing of the United States, which he manipulated and stretched. But he did

    not provoke this conflict. He was provoked by those who knew how to do it.

    The culpabilities of NATO were those of wishful thinking and bureaucratic

    formalism. It was not always so. After 1991, the Alliance understood that

    without integration, the ills and insecurities of Central Europe’s immature,

    over-militarised, post-Communist democracies would pose threats to

    themselves and others. Although it grasped that the former USSR was more

    complex territory, it refused to treat it as forbidden territory, recognising that

    the restoration of ‘zones of special interest’ would have adverse

    consequences along Russia’s periphery and inside Russia itself. These

    principles survived the events of 9/11, but the means of securing them

    diminished. The elaborate architecture of NATO-Russia ‘cooperation’ and the

    focus on ‘programmes’ and process substituted for negotiation, blunted

    warnings and marginalised analysis of Russian policies and plans. For 17

    years, NATO almost completely ruled out the re-emergence of Russian

    military threats in Europe. Defence cooperation with Georgia advanced

    alongside an almost principled refusal to articulate a policy on its territorial

    conflicts or assess the dangers they posed.

    The culpabilities of the United States lay in over-confidence and neglect.

    Once Saakashvili was inaugurated, he became anointed by Washington, as

    Shevardnadze once had been, and the trepidations and warnings of less

    favoured members of Georgia’s elite were ignored (even after the November

    2007 crisis bore them out). Command arrangements for the

    Sustainment and Stability Operations Programme were inappropriate for a conflict zone.1

    Georgia’s vulnerability and importance, its mercurial leadership, the presence

    of US forces and the precariousness of the post-Bucharest security

    environment called for high level coordination and direction. There was none.

    Instead, by summer 2007 there were a multiplicity of agencies, freelancers,

    ‘signals’ and back channels leading nowhere.

    The culpabilities of the ‘international community’ were those of piety and

    impotence. Its leading institutions (the UN and OSCE) are deadlocked by the

    opposition of its leading members. Its mechanisms for conflict resolution

    institutionalise deadlock. It was never the territorial conflicts in Georgia,

    Azerbaijan, Armenia and Moldova that were frozen, only the mechanisms of

    ‘resolution’. In practice, the mechanisms became the resolution, and it is not

    surprising that in 2004 Georgians elected a president who found this

    intolerable.

    The culpability of the Russian Federation is overshadowed by the problem it

    poses. Seventeen years after the Soviet collapse, Russia continues to define

    its interests at the expense of its neighbours. In Yeltsin’s time the right of

    these neighbours to develop according to their own models and with partners

    of their own choosing was disputed in principle but in practice conceded for a

    complex of reasons, of which weakness was only one. Any concessions

    during the early years of Putin’s presidency were the product of weakness

    alone.2 The threshold was crossed after 2004 thanks to the coloured

    revolutions and their evident failings, the West’s further disregard of Russia’s

    kto-kovo (zero-sum) scheme of interests (Kosovo, enlargement, missile

    defence) and the re-emergence of usable Russian power.

    Russia’s culpability lay in priming the mechanism for war. The calibrated

    sequence of measures, political and military, undertaken after NATO’s

    Bucharest summit, the combat readiness of the 58th Army, the crescendo of

    provocations by South Ossetian forces peaking on 6-7 August and the

    presence of Russian ‘peacekeepers’ on the scene—not to say all the Russian

    ‘studies’ of Saakashvili’s aims and character—belie official claims of ‘disbelief’

    at news of the Georgian offensive.3 The occupation of Georgian ports and

    cities and the cutting of its transport arteries, threats to the BakuTbilisi

    Ceyhan pipeline, the extension of the conflict to Abkhazia and the ethnic

    cleansing of Georgians from South Ossetia also belie Russia’s ‘humanitarian’

    justification for intervention. Finally, the employment of components of the

    Black Sea Fleet, whilst supporting clear military objectives, followed a

    sequence of provocative statements (and, in Crimea, actions) regarding

    Ukraine since Bucharest and obliges us to consider the wider geopolitical

    purposes of the conflict.

    Where To?

    Russia’s Georgia operation appears to be an assiduously planned tactical

    step in pursuit of a strategic goal that lacks a strategy. Those who planned it

    judged correctly that Georgia’s incapacity and the West’s divisions would

    enable Russia to transform the political and military landscape in the south

    Caucasus and Black Sea Region without sanction or reprisal. Yet this does

    not mean there will be no long-term consequences for Russia. Neither does it

    mean that the West will agree to learn the lesson intended: in President

    Medvedev’s words, that Russia ‘will no longer tolerate’ its ‘behaviour’ (or, by

    implication, influence) in Russia’s ‘regions of privileged interest’. It will hardly

    advance this narrowly conceived aim if the West adopts a less charitable

    assessment of Russia’s intentions or if the latest application of ‘firm good

    neighbourliness’ destroys the residues of friendship on Russia’s periphery.

    Russia’s mood (resentment, vengefulness and the worship of power) has

    dominated reason, and so long as Russia is both bully and victim, it will draw

    errant and possibly dangerous conclusions whether others are meek or

    tough.

    The Georgian conflict has dealt a powerful blow to Medvedev’s liberal project,

    insofar as it existed, and handed Putin as much de facto power as he wishes to take. The political and psychological pressures on the former to be as

    strong as the latter can only incapacitate him. The need for ‘strength’ makes

    him hostage to constituencies that will never be his (defence industry and the

    armed forces), it undermines his power to stand up to ‘national’ capital (those

    who do not derive their wealth from integration into the global economy) or

    fight for those who do, and it deprives him of authority abroad. To invert

    Kissinger’s question, ‘when there is a problem with Russia, who do you call?’

    The conflict has unified the country, but in so doing it has made dissent more

    perilous and entrenched the positions of those who would be the first to suffer

    if a major and increasingly urgent reform of the bureaucracy, economy and

    energy sector took place.

    Yet then comes the question: for how long? For how long will the neoisolationists

    not see what the stock market collapse made obvious: Russia’s

    dependency on the global economy? For how long will they ignore the

    economic and social costs of the country’s ‘legal nihilism’? For how long will

    Russia’s derzhavniki (great power ideologists) disregard the implications of

    the South Ossetian/Abkhaz secession for ‘national formations’ in Russia

    itself? What will happen when those who see these things are no longer

    quiet? Will things get better, or will they get worse before they get better?

    Today it is hard to say.

    Today it is also hard to say whether the West will recover its nerve or

    continue to neuter itself. Yet some changes are visible, and they are not

    entirely bad. It has become clear to all but the most besotted that the 1990’s

    paradigm of ‘partnership’ has exhausted itself. Although many G7 leaders

    speak with conviction about the importance of maintaining cooperation with

    Russia, few will pretend that cooperation is enough. Fewer now doubt

    Russia’s determination to resurrect its dominance over the former USSR, and

    whilst some would accommodate to this, virtually no one believes that a

    strong Russia is good for Europe.

    By establishing the NATO-Georgia Commission, by mandating it to ‘follow up

    the decisions taken at the Bucharest Summit’ and by assessing the needs of

    the Georgian army, NATO has quietly let Russia know that the game is not

    over. The EU’s agreement to conclude an association agreement with

    Ukraine in 2009 sent the same message: integration with Russia’s neighbours

    (and the EU’s own) will intensify rather than diminish. Prime Minister Putin

    might be right to ask ‘what is the West?’ Whatever it is, it is not leaving.

    There would be much to lose if it did. The notion that spheres of influence,

    established at the expense of countries residing in them, will generate less misery

    than they did before 1914 or prove any more stable is based on myth

    rather than realism. Our task is not to vindicate Russia’s outmoded paradigm

    of security, but create the conditions that will induce Russians, in their own

    interests, to question it. That will not be done by symbolic and provocative

    steps (e.g., MAP), but it will require practical measures to strengthen the

    security of neighbours and restore their confidence in the West and

    themselves.

     

     

     

    James Sherr September 2008

  • Calming the Caucasus  By Ali BABACAN

    Calming the Caucasus By Ali BABACAN

     

    TURKISH INITIATIVES

     

     

    The conflict between Russia and Georgia has once again demonstrated the volatile character of the Caucasus and why it is so crucial for the world to defuse tensions there.

    This conflict has affected all the countries of the region. Azerbaijan and Armenia, for example, were deprived of their main transport routes. It raised concerns about prominent infrastructure projects such as the railroad connection between Baku, Tbilisi and Kars, the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, and the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum gas pipeline, which promise to ensure the long-term energy and transport security of the region and Europe.

    As a neighbor to the conflict, Turkey has an enormous stake in overcoming the tension between Russia and Georgia.

    On behalf of the European Union, France has taken a very active role in arranging a cease-fire, and President Nicolas Sarkozy’s laudable efforts are fully supported by Turkey.

    To re-establish peace and stability in the Caucasus in the longer run, Turkey is also pursuing a series of diplomatic initiatives mainly based on three pillars.

    First, we have to recognize and address the profound lack of confidence among the states of the region. Russia and Georgia are at war with each other. The situation between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the conflict in and around Nagorno-Karabakh is not much different. There are also problems between Turkey and Armenia.

    The lack of confidence in the region creates a fertile environment for breeding instability, insecurity and, as we have seen in Georgia, war. It also undermines political dialogue, economic cooperation and good-neighborly relations that Caucasian countries need to prosper.

    Furthermore, this tense situation has become more or less an inherent feature of the Caucasus in the last 17 years, since none of the previous attempts to resolve the protracted conflicts there have yielded any constructive outcomes. This situation has to be corrected quickly.

    The Caucasus countries need to develop a functional method of finding solutions to their problems from within.

    Turkey’s proposal is to bring the countries of the region together under the Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform (CSCP).

    In the interest of building confidence among these nations, Turkey believes it is time to pursue a regional but comprehensive approach. The CSCP, in that context, provides an opportunity.

    It does not intend to become an alternative to any institution, mechanism or any international organization that deals with the problems of the Caucasus.

    On the contrary, it is an additional platform to facilitate the communication between the countries of the region, a framework to develop stability, confidence and cooperation, a forum for dialogue.

    In this context, it is not only compatible with Turkey’s EU policies but it also complements the EU’s policies and vision toward the Caucasus region, namely the EU Neighborhood Policy. This complementary feature might bring a new impetus and a functional momentum to the region.

    Second, in order to become a genuine honest broker in the region, Turkey has taken the initiative to create a favorable environment for the normalization of its bilateral relations with Armenia.

    President Abdullah Gul visited Yerevan on Sept. 6 to watch the World Cup qualifier match between the Turkish and Armenian soccer teams. This was an historic first step to break the barriers that have prevented our two nations from getting closer to each other.

    During the visit to Yerevan, the Armenian and Turkish presidents extensively discussed the security situation in the Caucasus, the prospects for the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations and the ways and means to achieve such normalization in the nearest future.

    I also accompanied Gul and had an opportunity to review the same topics in a more expanded fashion with Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian. No doubt, as long as we talk, none of the problems of the region could impose themselves on us as unsolvable.

    Third, as the process of normalizing Turkish-Armenian relations moves ahead, we must not spare our efforts to find a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. These two processes have a mutually reinforcing character – any positive development on one would significantly have a stimulating effect on the other.

    Gul, after his visit to Yerevan, traveled to Baku on Sept. 10 to inquire whether Turkey could facilitate the resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh problem. We observe the commitment in Baku, as well as in Yerevan, to bring a lasting solution to the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia. In this context, it is necessary once more to underline the importance of a constructive and comprehensive approach to resolving the problems in the Caucasus region.

    Turkey is a staunch advocate of the basic principles of international law such as independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity of states as well as peaceful resolution of conflicts through dialogue.

    With the initiatives that it has taken recently, Turkey seeks to bring stability and prosperity to the Caucasus region. CSCP can play a leading role in facilitating this outcome. A favorable environment for cooperation, harmony, confidence and mutual understanding will be achievable in the region only after the disputes and conflicts in the Caucasus are resolved peacefully and irrevocably.

    Ali Babacan is the foreign minister of Turkey.

  • Turkey starts to provide electro energy to Georgia

    Turkey starts to provide electro energy to Georgia

    Amount of import is about 1,118 square hours a day.

    Georgia started to import electro energy from Turkey, InterpressNews quoted the statement by press service of ‘Electro energetic system commercial operator’.

    Amount of import is about 1,118 square hours a day.

    Electro energy is imported based on the agreement formed with Turkish side of ‘Energo-Pro Georgia’ and is mainly provided to Ajara and Guria, the report said.

    ‘Energo-Pro Georgia’ exchanges electro energy from Turkey. Ligt to Turkish side was provided by ‘Energo-Pro Georgia’ hydro powers.

    Georgia imports electro energy from Russia apart from Turkey. Electo energy is also exchanged with Azerbaijan.

    Source: www.worldbulletin.net, 24 September 2008

  • TURKEY AND GEORGIA

    TURKEY AND GEORGIA

    Ambassador Ms. Fatma Dicle Kopuz, Director General for Policy Planning Department of the Turkish MFA and former Ambassador to Georgia, on Turkey’s position in Georgia:

    Turkey is situated in a volatile neighbourhood where there [are] many frozen conflicts, open disputes and potential crises. Turkey also is home to a substantial number of people from different parts of the Caucasus. The crisis in Georgia has the potential to spill-over to the region at large. From the outset of the crisis, Turkey has followed a calm approach and brought forward ideas for a realistic solution in the area. Turkey supports the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Georgia and looks forward to a settlement of the current conflict.

    Source: www.agendafin.com, Current issue 4 / 2008

  • Ambassador Brenton: UK expects Russia to reconsider Abkhazia, S. Ossetia recognition

    Ambassador Brenton: UK expects Russia to reconsider Abkhazia, S. Ossetia recognition

    Interfax’s Interview

    British Ambassador to Russia Tony Brenton has said he hopes Russia will reconsider its position on recognizing Abkhazia’s and South Ossetia’s independence and vowed that the United Kingdom would take part in a European Union mission of military monitors in the South Caucasus.

    “I do not know the exact numbers, but I do know that we are looking for twenty, thirty, or forty participants, and I am assuming that they will be on the ground as the European community gets its people onto the ground over the next few days,” Brenton said in an interview with Interfax.

    Times New Roman;”> “I hope that your readers will note that this will be a fantastic operation. The European community, the European Union from a standing start on the 8th of September has put together a big peacekeeping observer operation in the course of three weeks. That is a strong demonstration of the will of the European Union to contribute to getting the tensions down and to getting peace back in the region,” he said.

    Brenton described Russia’s recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia as “a big mistake, because the effect of it is that it makes it much more complicated for us to find a long-term solution to tensions between Georgia and Russia and between Georgia and Abkhazia and Georgia and South Ossetia.”

    “It is a pity that Russia said it is irreversible,” Brenton said.
    “I hope that, on reflection, Russia will think again, because the precedent we have for this is the president of Turkey recognizing North Cyprus, and it has landed Turkey for a period of thirty years with a small enclave unrecognized anywhere else in the world and placing on Turkey an economic and political burden. It would be very sad to see Abkhazia and South Ossetia in the same situation,” he said.

    Commenting on Russia’s proposal that an embargo should be imposed on weapon supplies to Georgia, Brenton said, “I do not think that Russia has formally made a proposal to that effect. I think that we would want to see Georgia having the capacity to defend itself in the future and having normal armed forces. I am sure we would not want to see, on the other hand, a sort of military buildup in the region which led to the problems of the 7th and 8th of August,” he said.

    Brenton urged the beginning of a discussion on launching a peace process “with nobody setting too many preconditions.”

    The immediate issue is the implementation of the 8th of September agreement [reached at negotiations between Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and French President Nicolas Sarkozy]. Once that agreement is fully implemented, then I hope the political tensions will begin to calm down and we will begin to be able to discuss the resumption of contacts of various sorts,” he said.

    “I know that the French presidency of the EU, for example, has made it clear that on the assumption that the 8th of September agreement is implemented, the European Union will then resume the negotiations on the Partnership and Cooperation Agreement with Russia,” he said.

    “NATO has not yet reflected on what the conditions have to be for the resumption of NATO-Russia contacts,” he said.

    Source: www.interfax.com