06/15/2009

A SHATTERED DREAM IN GEORGIA


EU Probe Creates Burden for Saakashvili


By Uwe Klussmann

Unpublished documents produced by the European Union commission that
investigated the conflict between Georgia and Moscow assign much of the
blame to Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili. But the Kremlin and
Ossetian militias are also partly responsible.

>From her office on Avenue de la Paix, Swiss diplomat Heidi Tagliavini, 58,
looks out onto the botanical gardens in peaceful Geneva. The view offers a
welcome respite from the stacks of documents on her desk, which deal
exclusively with war and war blame. They contain the responses, from the
conflicting parties in the Caucasus region -- Russia, Georgia, South Ossetia
and Abkhazia -- to a European Union investigative commission conducting a
probe of the cause of the five-day war last August. The documents also
include reports on the EU commission's trips to Moscow, the Georgian capital
Tbilisi and the capitals of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, dossiers assembled
by experts and the transcripts of interviews of diplomats, military
officials and civilian victims of the war.

The Caucasus expert, nicknamed "Madame Courage" by the Zurich-based Swiss
daily Neue Zürcher Zeitung, is considered a specialist on sensitive
diplomatic matters. The Caucasus issue is the most difficult challenge she
has faced to date. The final report by the commission she heads must be
submitted to the EU Council of Ministers by late July. In the report,
Tagliavini is expected to explain how, in August 2008, a long-smoldering
regional conflict over the breakaway Georgia province of South Ossetia could
suddenly have escalated into a war between Georgia and its much more
powerful neighbor, Russia. Who is to blame for the most serious
confrontation between East and West since the end of the Cold War?

In addition to having a budget of €1.6 million ($2.2 million) at her
disposal, Tagliavini can draw on the expertise of two deputies, 10
specialists, military officials, political scientists, historians and
international law experts.

Much hinges on the conclusions her commission will reach. Is Georgia, a
former Soviet republic, a serious candidate for membership in NATO, or is
the country in the hands of a reckless gambler? Did the Russian leadership
simply defend South Ossetia, an ally seeking independence from Georgia,
against a Georgian attack? Or did Russia spark a global crisis when its
troops occupied parts of Georgia for a short period of time?

The confidential investigative commission documents, which SPIEGEL has
obtained, show that the task of assigning blame for the conflict has been as
much of a challenge for the commission members as it has for the
international community. However, a majority of members tend to arrive at
the assessment that Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili started the war
by attacking South Ossetia on August 7, 2008. The facts assembled on
Tagliavini's desk refute Saakashvili's claim that his country became the
innocent victim of "Russian aggression" on that day. 

In summarizing the military fiasco, commission member Christopher Langton, a
retired British Army colonel, claims: "Georgia's dream is shattered, but the
country can only blame itself for that."

Another commission member, Bruno Coppieter, a political scientist from
Brussels, even speculates whether the Georgian government may have had
outside help in its endeavor. "The support of Saakashvili by the West,
especially military support," Coppieter writes, "inadvertently promoted
Georgia's collision course."

Berlin journalist Jörg Himmelreich, who is also a member of the German
Marshall Fund of the United States, disagrees. He advocates Georgia's
acceptance into NATO and condones the "brief Georgian occupation of the
South Ossetia capital Tskhinvali" with the argument that Georgian President
Saakashvili faced "great pressure from within his own population to produce
results," and to deliver on a promise he had made several times to achieve
"reunification" with the separatist republic.

Self-Defense? 

Himmelreich sharply condemns Russia's actions as "aggression" and a
"violation of international law." Commission member Otto Luchterhandt, a
Hamburg international law expert, reaches a more differentiated assessment.
He argues that because the Georgians attacked a base used by Russian
peacekeeping forces in the South Ossetian provincial capital Tskhinvali,
Russia can invoke the right of self-defense under Article 51 of the United
Nations Charter.

The Russian troops were stationed in South Ossetia as a result of a 1992
agreement, binding under international law, between Russia and Georgia.
Georgia's attack, Luchterhandt argues, constitutes a breach of this
agreement, thereby giving Russia the right to intervene. Nevertheless, he
writes, the Kremlin, with its overwhelming intervention in western Georgia,
can be accused of "violating the principle of proportionality." 

The experts found no evidence to support claims by the Georgian president,
which he also mentioned in an interview with SPIEGEL, that a Russian column
of 150 tanks had advanced into South Ossetia on the evening of Aug. 7.
According to the commission's findings, the Russian army didn't enter South
Ossetia until August 8.

Commission members note, on the other hand, that Saakashvili had already
amassed 12,000 troops and 75 tanks on the border with South Ossetia on the
morning of Aug. 7. In their research, they uncovered remarks by the Georgian
president that demonstrate that he had long flirted with a military solution
to the South Ossetian problem. "If you ask any Georgian soldier why he is
serving in the armed forces, each of them will respond: 'To reestablish
Georgia's territorial integrity,'" Saakashvili said in a television address
on May 25, 2004.

Senior officials at the German Foreign Ministry in Berlin know that then
German Ambassador Uwe Schramm warned in his reports of Saakashvili's
penchant towards war. Schramm is now Tagliavini's deputy on the
investigative commission.

When the five-day war began, Georgian General Mamuka Kurashvili said on
television that his country would "reestablish constitutional order in the
entire region." He may have been quoting from Georgian order No. 2, dated
August 7. To date, the Georgians have not submitted a copy of this key
document to the commission as requested, nor have they turned over copies of
other official orders. The commission interprets these omissions as a sort
of admission of guilt.

The commission members generally agree, however, that the Georgians and
Russians alike violated the provision in the Geneva Convention for the
Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War. Both armies, for example,
used cluster bombs, which distribute explosives over a wide area, killing
several civilians and wounding many more. Georgia admits to having used the
weapons, while Russia denies the charges.

"War Crimes" 

The commission also cited many serious attacks on Georgian civilians by
South Ossetia militias. According to a report for the commission by Swiss
legal expert Théo Boutruche, militia members, most of them young men, looted
and burned down several villages inhabited by Georgians, beat civilians and
murdered more than a dozen Georgians. According to the Hague Convention on
Land Warfare, the Russian occupying force was obligated to reestablish
public order. But it did almost nothing to prevent the atrocities, which a
commission dossier classifies as "war crimes."

It is now up to the Swiss head of the commission to prepare the final
version of the report, and there are no plans to include dissenting
opinions. However, Tagliavini has a reputation for avoiding harsh judgments
against any party to a conflict. Commission members predict that she will
likely integrate Himmelreich's position into the final report, keeping the
door open for Georgia to join the Western defense alliance, despite its
hot-headed president. In early June, Saakashvili boasted that his country
was still at war with its Russian "enemy."

Another question will likely remain unanswered: What role did the United
States, the sole remaining superpower, play in the Georgian conflict? For
years, the government of former President George W. Bush provided Georgia
with extensive military aid, which included sending about 150 military
trainers to the country. 

Nevertheless, a number of commission members are curious to know what John
Tefft, the US ambassador in Tbilisi and a former advisor at the National War
College in Washington, knew about Saakashvili's marching orders. One
question they would like to ask is why no one at the US State Department
took a call from Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin when the
war broke out in the early morning hours of August 8 -- when it was
afternoon in Washington.

Other commission members would be interested in talking to Daniel Fried, the
assistant secretary of state responsible for Georgia at the time. Fried
recently told a German foreign policy expert privately that Saakashvili
"went out of control" in August.

But Tagliavini's team won't be questioning any Americans. According to one
member of the commission, "our director and the EU apparently lack the
courage" to take that step.




http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,630543,00.html

 






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