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Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
March 13, 2002

-But regional experts generally believe the decision
to send troops was prompted by broader security
concerns. These could include bolstering Georgian
President Eduard Shevardnadze's government, protecting
a projected U.S.-sponsored multimillion dollar oil
pipeline that would run through Georgia, or ensuring a
safe supply route to new U.S. military bases in
Central Asia. 
-Those protests were prompted by reports that Tbilisi
might ask Turkey -- which last year refurbished a
Georgian military air base vacated by the Russian Army
and is modernizing another airfield located near the
Armenian border -- to send troops to Javakheti. Even
though these reports were later denied by Georgian
authorities, they raised alarm in Armenia, which sees
Azerbaijan's Ankara ally as the main threat to its
security.




Caucasus: Possible U.S. Military Buildup In Georgia
Raises Armenian Concerns
By Jean-Christophe Peuch

News that Washington is preparing to send military
advisers to Georgia as part an antiterror drive has
been met with wariness in Armenia. Some Armenian
experts suspect the U.S. decision may be prompted by
security concerns that are broader than simply the
search for a handful of Al-Qaeda fugitives reportedly
hiding in Georgia's Pankisi Gorge. 

Prague, 12 March 2002 (RFE/RL) -- The expected arrival
of American soldiers in Georgia as part of
Washington's global antiterror drive is generally
viewed in the Caucasus as heralding increased U.S.
involvement in the region. 

On 26 February, the United States announced it would
send up to 200 military advisers to help Georgia's
armed forces uproot Al-Qaeda fugitives reportedly
hiding in a mountainous area bordering Russia's
separatist region of Chechnya.

Washington insists its aim is limited to helping
Tbilisi eradicate elements of Osama bin Laden's
terrorist network.

But regional experts generally believe the decision to
send troops was prompted by broader security concerns.
These could include bolstering Georgian President
Eduard Shevardnadze's government, protecting a
projected U.S.-sponsored multimillion dollar oil
pipeline that would run through Georgia, or ensuring a
safe supply route to new U.S. military bases in
Central Asia. 

In Armenia, which remains closely linked to Russia
despite efforts to initiate ties with NATO and the
West, news of the U.S. deployment plans was met with a
certain degree of wariness, although Russian President
Vladimir Putin, for one, does not seem to be opposed
to the deployment.

Armenian Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian said he
thought the presence of U.S. soldiers in Georgia was
unlikely to destabilize the region in the immediate
future. Yet, pressed by reporters to assess the
situation, he cautiously said: "Let's wait and see
what happens."

Armenia's pro-government daily "Azg"was more critical.
It wrote this month that the presence of U.S. troops
might, in the long run, lead to "dangerous
developments." It cited possible troubles in Georgia's
Javakheti Province, a region mostly populated by
ethnic Armenians and where Russia maintains a major
military base. 

Armenia's former prime minister, Vazgen Manukian, told
our correspondent that, in his view, the ongoing
changes are likely to have a negative effect in a
region that has seen a decade of interethnic strife.
Manukian, who now heads the National Democratic Union
opposition party, said uncertainty over Washington's
real aims in dispatching troops to Georgia further
complicates the picture. 

"I do not expect anything good. Why? The problem is
not so much that the U.S. and Russia are vying for
influence in Transcaucasia (the three southern
Caucasus states of Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan).
The problem is that countries in that region have no
common vision of what they want. It took two world
conflicts before Europe finally decided what it wanted
and, after that, it was in a position to easily find
solutions to its internal problems. But our region has
no such common vision. And when there is no common
vision, any interference can hardly bring anything but
troubles."

Since the U.S. made its plans public, Georgia's
separatist republics of Abkhazia and South Ossetia
have increased their demands and asked to be included
in the Russian Federation as "associate members." The
Kremlin has not reacted to these demands, but Russia's
State Duma adopted a non-binding resolution last week
(6 March) threatening to strengthen ties between
Moscow and both regions.

In the early 1990s, Abkhazia and South Ossetia
successfully fought against Georgian government troops
with the active support of Russia -- which was seeking
to undermine Georgia's nationalist president at the
time, Zviad Gamsakhurdia. Despite subsequent
Moscow-brokered cease-fire agreements, both republics
are still formally at war with Tbilisi and
international efforts to bring all sides to sign
comprehensive peace accords have brought little so
far. In addition, both South Ossetia and Abkhazia
remain de facto under Russian control.

Years of international mediation have failed to bring
Armenia and Azerbaijan to settle their 14-year-old
territorial dispute over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.
Both countries fought a war that resulted in
Moscow-backed ethnic Armenian troops gaining full
control over Karabakh and occupying half a dozen
Azerbaijani districts.

Some regional analysts believe the presence of U.S.
troops in the region -- however limited -- might
foster a peaceful solution to the conflict by
accelerating the search for a compromise between
Armenia and Azerbaijan. But other experts say they do
not expect any substantial progress unless Russia
changes its own foreign policy toward the entire
region. 

Svante Cornell is an analyst at the Washington-based
School for Advanced International Studies of Johns
Hopkins University and the editor of the "Central
Asia-Caucasus Analyst" newsletter. In an interview
with RFE/RL, Cornell said the almost-absolute
preference given to Russia by landlocked Armenia over
the past decade -- mostly due to security and energy
supply concerns -- had left local leaders with
virtually no alternative. 

Asked whether he expects the presence of U.S. troops
in Georgia to affect relations between Yerevan and
Moscow, Cornell says: "No, absolutely not, because
Armenia's foreign policy is deeply tied to Russia.
Armenia's dependence on Russia has been increasing
over the past few years. Armenia's debts to Russia are
being paid not in cash, but by Russia acquiring large
Armenian enterprises and industries. So, not only
politically, but also economically, Russia is
increasing its control over Armenia. For Russia,
Armenia is a very important piece of real estate,
which will enable it to have a continued influence in
the South Caucasus -- even [though] Georgia and
Azerbaijan continue to be outside Moscow's orbit." 

In Cornell's view, "given Armenia's economic
difficulties, only an alliance with Russia will allow
it to exert control over Karabakh in the short and
middle term."

Cornell also says Moscow's continued backing of
Yerevan will deter Baku from attempting to regain
control over its occupied territories by force.

Gagik Avakian is an Armenian political analyst and the
co-chairman of a Yerevan-based non-governmental
organization known as "Cooperation and Democracy."
Avakian tells our correspondent that, while the
majority of Armenia's population sees Russia as the
main guarantor of its security, the leadership is
looking at other strategic partners as part of the
"complementary" foreign policy launched in the
mid-1990s by then-President Levon Ter-Petrosian. 

Avakian believes this complementary policy explains
why Armenian leaders have cautiously reacted to the
upcoming deployment of U.S. soldiers in Georgia,
although he says these developments did not come as a
surprise to anyone in Armenia.

"Armenia has no real clear-cut conception of what its
foreign policy should be. Our [foreign] policy is a
very responsive one. Given the existing balance [of
forces in the region,] our reflex has to be wait and
see. Of course it would be much better if we could
have a real foreign policy because we could then use
it to defend our national interests. But this not
being the case, we have to have a wait-and-see policy
and see how the situation develops further."

Avakian believes that, despite their stated
pro-Western foreign policies, both Georgia and
Azerbaijan are confronted with the same problem. He
says that, like Armenia, neither of these countries is
really the master of its own fate. 

"I think that, today, not a single country in the
southern Caucasus region can really initiate anything.
The deployment of U.S. troops is not entirely the
result of a decision made by Georgia. The decision was
not made entirely on Georgia's initiative. Georgia
rather yielded to external circumstances and the U.S.
deployment could end up not being as advantageous as
it seems for Georgia, because tomorrow or the day
after tomorrow, Russia can decide to take action
against [Tbilisi]. [Moscow] has a whole range of
instruments at its disposal to do so, including
economic ones."

Like former Premier Manukian, Avakian believes the
only viable solution for Armenia and its southern
Caucasus neighbors lies in regional cooperation. Both
men believe that only regional ties can help all three
southern Caucasus states meet their long-term security
challenges.

Manukian says: "We are not refusing assistance offered
by international organizations or great powers. But it
seems to me that [our] region is the scene of
competing ambitions, that [these great powers] are
playing a game and are sometimes behaving with us as
if we were nothing but pawns. With such an approach,
it is impossible to solve our problems." 

Meanwhile, the situation in Georgia's southern
Javakheti Province -- where local ethnic Armenians
have staged street protests in recent weeks to demand
autonomy -- has raised speculation that Tbilisi might
look for further foreign military help. 

Those protests were prompted by reports that Tbilisi
might ask Turkey -- which last year refurbished a
Georgian military air base vacated by the Russian Army
and is modernizing another airfield located near the
Armenian border -- to send troops to Javakheti. Even
though these reports were later denied by Georgian
authorities, they raised alarm in Armenia, which sees
Azerbaijan's Ankara ally as the main threat to its
security.

In Avakian's view, any Turkish military buildup in the
region would inevitably prompt Yerevan to turn to
Moscow for increased military supplies. 

He says that "As long as relations with Turkey remain
as difficult as they are, Armenians will continue to
consider Russia as the best guarantor of their
safety."



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