EURASIA INSIGHT
Nina Akhmeteli
5/09/08
Print this article
Email this article
With Georgian-Russian tension over the break-away territory of Abkhazia continuing to rise, the United States and European Union are stepping up diplomatic intervention efforts.
The European Union announced May 9 that a group of foreign ministers would head to Tbilisi to explore ways of halting the hostile actions and rhetoric that have marked Georgian-Russian relations in recent weeks. The EU delegation, due to visit Georgia on May 12, is expected to comprise the foreign ministers of Slovenia, Sweden, Poland and Lithuania. Mutual enmity between Tbilisi and Moscow has spiked since the April 20 downing of a Georgian unmanned reconnaissance drone on April 20. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].
Since the shoot-down, Russia has moved unilaterally to increase its troop levels in Abkhazia, where they serve as a peacekeeping force. Georgian officials insist that the Russian peacekeepers are an impediment to a political settlement between separatist leaders in Sukhumi and President Mikheil Saakashvilis administration in Tbilisi. On May 8, the Russian Defense Ministry revealed that it had increased the peacekeeping force to 2,542 troops. Under ceasefire terms established in 1994, the peacekeeping force cannot exceed 3,000.
Meanwhile, the Abkhaz separatist leadership claimed May 8 that territorial defense forces had shot down another Georgian drone, this one armed with an air-to-air missile, the Interfax news agency reported. In all, Abkhaz leaders say they have downed five Georgian reconnaissance drones in recent weeks. Georgia denied that it lost a drone May 8, and says only one reconnaissance craft, in the April 20 incident, has been shot down.
A top Georgian government official sounded an urgent note in addressing the Council of Europes Ministerial Council on May 7 in Strasbourg. Only a determined effort by the United States and EU could thwart Russias hegemonic ambitions, asserted Georgias Vice Prime Minister Giorgi Baramidze. He traveled to Strasbourg to build support for a Georgian plan that would replace Russian peacekeepers in Abkhazia with an international force.
"Russia carries out in Abkhazia and South Ossetia open aggression and it needs a clear response. If Europe can do something for defending its principles and values, it should do it now," Baramidze said in a May 8 interview broadcast on the Rustavi 2.
In recent days, US diplomats have stepped up their rhetoric in support of Saakashvilis administration. During a May 9 briefing in Tbilisi, US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Matthew Bryza assailed Russias peacekeeping behavior, saying; "Mediators or peacekeepers dont issue military threats to parties to a conflict."
Bryza also praised Georgia for showing restraint in the face of a "series of provocative steps by Russia in recent weeks." The US diplomat called on Moscow to consider peace proposals recently advanced by Saakashvili. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].
Like Washington, Brussels is supporting Saakashvilis peace plan. "We are very much interested to work with the Georgian government to develop that proposals and further proposals to defend and facilitate any contact dialogue between Tbilisi and the conflict regions," said Peter Semneby, the EU Special Representative to the South Caucasus.
The EUs growing diplomatic interest in Georgian-Russian tension does not signal Brussels willingness as yet to participate in a revamped peacekeeping operation. "This is hypothetical discussion," said Semneby, referring to potential changes in the peacekeeping format.
The EU, though clearly supportive of Tbilisi, continues to hold out hope that it can play a mediating role. Thus, it is not willing at present to commit to any actions that would set it in firm opposition to Moscow. On May 9, Slovenian Foreign Minister Dmitrij Rupel emphasized that the EU did not have "any intention of supporting one side against the other now."
Following talks with EU representatives May 8 in Tbilisi, however, Georgian government officials sounded confident that a fundamental shift in the EUs stance toward Georgian integration in NATO is in progress. EU opposition was the primary reason that Georgia did not receive a NATO membership action plan at the alliances summit in April. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].
Shifting EU attitudes could not only result in Tbilisis accelerated entry into NATO, but also in Brussels eventual support for a change in the composition of the peacekeepers in Abkhazia. "Sooner or later so called Russian peacekeepers will have to go home," State Minister for Reintegration Issues Temuri Yakobashvili told to reporters on May 8.
Editor’s Note: Nina Akhmeteli is a freelance reporter based in Tbilisi.
Posted May 9, 2008 © Eurasianet
http://www.eurasianet.org
|
The Central Eurasia Project aims, through its website,
meetings, papers, and grants, to foster a more informed
debate about the social, political and economic
developments of the Caucasus and Central Asia.
It is a program of the Open Society
Institute-New York. The Open Society Institute-New
York is a private operating and grantmaking foundation
that promotes the development of open societies around
the world by supporting educational, social, and legal
reform, and by encouraging alternative
approaches to complex and controversial issues.
The views expressed in this publication do not necessarily
represent the position of the Open Society Institute and
are the sole responsibility of the author or
authors.
|
|