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Authors: Marcel H. Van Herpen

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61.

Goldhagen,
Worse than War
, 29. A similar argument is made by Susan Neiman who, rightly, emphasized that not
intentions
, but the results are decisive. “What counts,” she wrote, “is not what your road is
paved with, but whether it leads to hell. Precisely the belief that evil actions require
evil intentions allowed totalitarian regimes to convince people to override moral
objections that might otherwise have functioned.” (Susan Neiman,
Evil in Modern Thought: An Alternative History of Philosophy
(Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2002), 275.)

62.

Kovalev, “Putin’s War.”

63.

Goldhagen,
Worse than War
, 250–251.

64.

Koroteev, “Les violations des droits humains en Tchétchénie devant la Cour Européenne
des Droits de l’Homme,” 119.

65.

Cf. Miriam Kosmehl, “Tschetschenien und das internationale Recht,” in
Der Krieg im Schatten: Rußland und Tschetschenien
, ed. Florian Hassel, 121–122.

66.

Michael Ignatieff, “Human Rights as Politics,” in
Human Rights as Politics and Idolatry,
edited and introduced by Amy Gutmann (Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press, 2001),
41–42.

Chapter 13
The War with Georgia, Part I

A Premeditated Russian Aggression

After the War in Georgia, Vaclav Havel and other prominent personalities, wrote an
op-ed in which they argued that “a great power always finds pretexts to invade a neighbor
whose independence it does not accept. Let us remember: Hitler accused the Poles of
being the first to have opened fire in 1939 and Stalin held the Finns responsible
for the war he started against them in 1940. The fundamental question is to know which
is the occupied country and which is the occupying country, who has invaded whom,
rather than who has fired the first bullet.”
[1]
We should keep these words in mind when analyzing the events which took place in
Georgia in August 2008.

A Five-Day War?

The Russian version of the war in Georgia is as follows: on the night of August 7,
2008, Georgian troops entered the breakaway province of South Ossetia and launched
a surprise attack on its capital, Tskhinvali. During the attack the Georgian troops
killed two thousand civilians: a clear case of genocide. Many of the victims were
Russian citizens. In addition, Russian peacekeepers, stationed in South Ossetia, were
killed. To stop this genocide Russian troops started a “humanitarian intervention.”
They entered South Ossetia and Abkhazia, the other breakaway province, to drive the
Georgian aggressors back. This version of the facts was not only broadcast nationwide
by the Russian media and disseminated by Russian diplomats abroad, it was personally
explained by Vladimir Putin to US President George W. Bush, who were both attending
the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in Beijing on August 8.

This official Russian narrative, however, was a prime example of active disinformation,
a deception method of which the Russian secret service is the unrivaled champion.
When the war began the Kremlin immediately launched cyber attacks against Georgia
and effectively blocked the websites of the Georgian government and the Georgian media.
In so doing it was able to impose its own version of the events from the very start
of the conflict. It even managed, with considerable success, to influence Western
public opinion. Most correspondents of Western media in Moscow accepted uncritically
the Russian narrative “that the war started with a Georgian attack, which was followed
by a Russian response.” The only criticism to be heard was concerning the “disproportionate”
character of the Russian response, a euphemism for the massive attacks outside South
Ossetia and Abkhazia on the Georgian heartland and the destruction of the military
and economic infrastructure of the country.
[2]
The Russian disinformation campaign was very successful. It is telling that even
Pavel Baev, an analyst who could never be accused of being naïve vis-à-vis the Putin
regime, wrote on August 11—one day before the ceasefire: “[the Russian] surprise was
so complete that Putin, according to those who saw him in Beijing, was pale with barely
controlled rage, which he tried to convey to U.S. President George Bush and Kazakh
President Nursultan Nazarbayev.”
[3]
For this interpretation of the facts Baev referred to a Russian source. A similar
version of the facts could be found in a report by a European think tank, published
some weeks after the war. In this report it was stated that “Moscow has
responded
to Saakashvili’s military attack on South Ossetia by escalating a conflict over a
secessionist region into a full-scale inter-state war with Georgia.”
[4]

Does this interpretation of the Russian war against Georgia as a Russian response,
provoked by a Georgian aggression that led to a genocide, stand up to the facts? No,
it does not. This war, far from being—as most media at the time wanted to believe—a
reckless act, initiated by an impulsive Georgian president, was a carefully planned
operation. It had been prepared by the Russian leadership since 2000 through a process
of gradual and purposive escalation. Step by step this process was implemented and
brought to its final
dénouement
in August 2008. If we want to analyze this war and the factors that led to it we
should, therefore, analyze its
complete
history and this history does not start on August 7, 2008, but in the year 2000.
That we take this choice of start date is no coincidence, because it is the same year
in which Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin was elected president of the Russian Federation.
From this point Russia’s Georgia policy changed radically, although not particularly
in terms of its objectives. These remained generally the same as at the beginning
of the 1990s. These objectives were to divide Georgia and undermine its viability
as an independent and sovereign state. The active military support given by Russia
to separatist movements during the civil wars in South Ossetia (1991–1992) and Abkhazia
(1992–1993), as well as its support for the corrupt autocrat Aslan Abashidze in Adjara
(Southwest Georgia) until his forced resignation in 2004, had no objective other than
to weaken Georgia. Plans to incorporate Abkhazia into Russia already existed in the
1990s, as became clear from a remark made by Pavel Grachev, then Russian minister
of defense, who told Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze: “We can’t leave Abkhazia,
because then we’d lose the Black Sea.”
[5]
Zbigniew Brzezinski wrote shortly after the civil wars: “In Georgia, military intervention
gave Moscow the pretext for political mediation. In the course of it Georgia learned
. . . that Russia as an umpire is not very different from Russia as an empire.”
[6]

With the arrival of the new strongman in the Kremlin it was the strategy, not the
objectives, that changed. This strategy was no longer based on ad hoc initiatives
and on blocking solutions aimed at reintegrating the breakaway provinces into Georgia.
From this point on there was a well-organized long-term planning. Every single step
was deliberately calculated in advance, and a war with Georgia became an option. After
the war with Chechnya, the war with Georgia became Putin’s
second
war of choice. Contrary to the official Kremlin version that insists on calling the
war in Georgia a “Five-Day War,”
three
different phases in this conflict can be discerned:

  • the period of a Russian-Georgian cold war (December 2000 to spring 2008)

  • a period of a lukewarm war (spring 2008 until August 7, 2008)

  • the hot war (August 7–August 12, 2008)

The Russian-Georgian Cold War:
The Passport Offensive

The Russian-Georgian Cold War started in December 2000, when the Russian government
imposed visa requirements for Georgians who worked in Russia—an unfriendly measure
that was directed against the thousands of Georgian citizens who worked in Russia
and sent remittances to their relatives at home. Georgia was the first and only CIS
country for which visas were introduced. Moscow said the measure was necessary to
prevent Chechen rebels from entering Chechnya via Georgian territory. This decision,
taken in the first year of Putin’s presidency was the first sign of a more aggressive
stance toward Georgia. In 2002 this anti-Georgian policy entered a new phase when
the Russian authorities started distributing Russian passports on a wide scale to
the inhabitants of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
[7]
This “passport offensive” made it clear that Moscow’s intention was to “thaw” the
frozen conflicts in Georgia and then resolve them in a way that suited Moscow’s interests.
By creating a majority of “Russian citizens” in the two breakaway provinces Russia
seemed to be preparing these provinces for some form of integration into Russia. Ronald
Asmus wrote:

Russian passports were welcome as a way to travel although in reality few residents
ever left the country except to visit Russia. For Moscow it created a fake diaspora
and another lever of control. Having handed out thousands of passports to individuals
living on what it still recognized as Georgian territory, Moscow would subsequently
claim the right to defend its newly minted “citizens.”
[8]
. . . [That] doctrine was reminiscent of what Nazi Germany had done in the Sudetenland
in the late 1930s, using the German diaspora to agitate in favor of unification with
Germany and then justifying the dismemberment of Czechoslovakia with the need to protect
ethnic Germans suffering persecution in Prague.
[9]

Some observers dubbed this policy “re-occupation through passportization.”
[10]
The EU-sponsored “Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on the Conflict
in Georgia,” headed by the Swiss diplomat Heidi Tagliavini, was also very clear on
the illegal nature of Russia’s passport policy, reporting that “the issuance of passports
is an act based on governmental authority. To the Mission’s knowledge, the passports
were in many cases distributed on the territory of the breakaway entities. To the
extent that these acts have been performed in Georgia without Georgia’s explicit consent,
Russia has violated the principle of territorial sovereignty.
[11]

But it was not only
Russian
passports that were distributed. The
de facto
deputy minister of Foreign Affairs of Abkhazia, Maksim Gvindzhia, declared on September
6, 2006, that at that point roughly 80 percent of the population held a
dual
Abkhaz-Russian citizenship.
[12]
This means that the Abkhaz government had already started to distribute its
own
—illegal—passports two years before its independence was recognized by Russia.
[13]
Because holders of Abkhaz passports could obtain a dual Russian-Abkhaz citizenship
(which gave Abkhaz citizens the right to receive Russian pensions and to travel to
Russia without restrictions),
[14]
it became clear that from 2006 Russia was conducting a
double track
strategy, leaving both options open: either the independence for Abkhazia, or its
incorporation into the Russian Federation. The extent to which these options even
remained open after the August 2008 war, emerged from declarations by the presidents
of the two breakaway provinces on September 11, 2008. According to the Russian news
agency RIA Novosti, “South Ossetian President Eduard Kokoity said his republic planned
to merge with the neighboring Russian province of North Ossetia, and become part of
Russia, a statement he later withdrew [apparently under pressure from the Kremlin,
MHVH]. Meanwhile, Abkhaz President Sergei Bagapsh said Abkhazia would not pursue to
obtain ‘associated territory’ status with Russia, but would seek to join the post-Soviet
Commonwealth of Independent States and the Russia-Belarus Union State.”
[15]

 

In December 2001 Eduard Kokoity replaced the more moderate South Ossetian independentist
President Lyudvig Chibirov. Kokoity was Moscow’s man. A former Komsomol apparatchik
and ex-Soviet professional wrestler, Kokoity was accused of links with organized crime.
[16]
As a member of Aleksandr Dugin’s revisionist International Eurasianist Movement
that propagated the reintegration of former parts of the Soviet Union into the Russian
Federation,
[17]
he was never interested in any negotiated compromise with Tbilisi. For Moscow,
Kokoity was the right man in the right place to block, definitively, the eventual
reintegration of South Ossetia into Georgia, opting for a solution that would make
the secession of the region permanent.

It is important to note that this aggressive strategy by Russia toward Georgia started
in the years 2000–2002. It was, therefore, neither a reaction to the Rose Revolution
nor to Georgia’s aspirations for NATO membership: during those years the Georgian
president was Eduard Shevardnadze and not Mikheil Saakashvili, and the Rose Revolution
had not yet taken place. Also a Georgian NATO membership was not on the political
agenda. After the Rose Revolution in 2003, however, the relationship rapidly deteriorated.
When, on September 27, 2006, Georgia arrested four Russians diplomats suspected of
espionage for the GRU, the Russian military secret service, and extradited them some
days later, the Kremlin launched a full-scale economic and diplomatic war. It was
a case of pure and deliberate overkill
.
Russia suspended all air, rail, and road traffic between Russia and Georgia, including
the postal services. It stopped issuing visas to Georgians and imposed import bans
on Georgian wine and mineral water. Putin declared “that Georgia’s home and foreign
politics was similar to that conducted by KGB during Stalin’s times,”
[18]
which is a surprising remark for a former KGB agent who has never hidden his deep
personal pride in being a Chekist. The economic blockade was accompanied by a vehement
anti-Georgian campaign within the Russian Federation, targeting the approximately
one million Georgians who lived and worked in the country. Georgian businesses in
Moscow were raided; illegal immigrants were hunted and expelled. The Russian action
clearly constituted a “racist campaign,” wrote Salomé Zourabichvili, who was Georgian
foreign minister from 2004 to 2005. “[It was] apparently supported by the official
authorities, [and took] the form of a “hunt for the Caucasian” in the streets of Russia’s
main cities.”
[19]
The Moscow police asked schools to provide lists of children with Georgian names
in order to check out their parents. The government sponsored raids on Georgian migrant
workers and market traders soon started to give off a whiff of ethnic cleansing, which
led the independent radio station Ekho Moskvy (Echo of Moscow) to start a campaign
asking their listeners to wear a badge with the slogan
Ya Gruzin
(I am a Georgian).
[20]

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