From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: NATO Proxy War In Caucasus: New Front Against Russia
[WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK]

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---------------------------

[Screen out the Stratforese and you'll get the
picture.] 

"[W]hile Russia is certainly an important U.S.
partner, Georgia remains strategically significant for
Washington. American efforts to influence Central Asia
and the Caspian region depends on being able to ship
the area's petroleum out through Georgia....The
presence of U.S. forces in Uzbekistan also boosts U.S.
interests in Georgia as Washington may need to ship
military equipment through the country for use in
Central Asia."
" [Shevardnadze] would facilitate the presence of a UN
or NATO force in the country."


October 21, 2001
A new front opens against Russia
By Peter Zeihan
STRATFOR.COM
 
?????A joint force of Chechen and Georgian militants
is carrying out attacks on Abkhazia, a breakaway
province of Georgia. The militants are attempting to
open new fronts against Russia, weakening Moscow's
military strength and control over both Abkhazia and
Chechnya. ?????Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze
may also use the situation to help usher international
forces into the country to bolster his government.
?????Local press reports indicate a group of 200 to
possibly 1,200 Chechen and pro-Georgia militants are
attacking Abkhazia, a secessionist province that
declared its independence from Georgia in 1993.
Various media are reporting heavy fighting at the
mouth of the Kodori Gorge region of Abkhazia, an
attack on Sukhumi, the Abkhaz capital, and a rebel
advance on the Russian border, with perhaps as many as
100 people killed in the past three weeks.
?????With global events in a flux amid the U.S.-led
military campaign in Afghanistan, the Chechen and
Georgian militants are likely trying to force Moscow
to divert resources to Abkhazia and to weaken its
military strength. Concurrently, Russia now needs its
best military personnel in Tajikistan to guard against
Taliban incursions.
?????The Georgian government, which is accused by
Russia and Abkhazia of assisting the force, may also
be looking to use the conflict to neutralize Russia's
presence in the country.
?????The region's politics are messy, to say the
least. Abkhazia would not have succeeded in its
1992-1993 war for independence without Russia's
support, which at one point included air strikes on
Georgian military formations.
?????
?????Georgia backs Chechens
?????Russia has kept about 1,600 "peacekeepers" in the
province since 1993, officially to provide security
and unofficially to keep Georgia destabilized and
within Russia's sphere of influence.
?????Georgia accuses Russia of siding with the Abkhaz
separatists and allowing the province to maintain its
independence. But Chechen support was also essential
for Abkhazia's independence, and after engaging in two
wars against Moscow in the past seven years, the
Chechens are fed up with the Abkhaz for their
consistently pro-Russian politics.
?????This development led to a rapprochement between
Georgia and the Chechens. Now the Kremlin asserts that
the Georgian government allows Chechen rebels to
conduct cross-border attacks against Russian forces
from the Pankisi Gorge, a region in Georgia just south
of Chechnya. Tbilisi counters that the Chechens of
Pankisi are merely refugees from Russia's military
campaigns. 
?????Russia's claims are likely true; Georgia likely
had at least cursory knowledge of the militant force's
movement, and the independent Georgian newspaper Alia
reports that Georgian security forces were even
involved in recruiting some of the militants.
?????Abkhaz leaders claim Georgian army regulars or
police are part of the force, while Tbilisi counters
that if Georgians are involved, they are vigilantes.
Such irregulars operate with impunity throughout much
of the country. Georgia also says it can prove Russia
has conducted air strikes on Georgian positions near
the Kodori Gorge. 
?????
?????Kodori Gorge hot spot
?????This mix of volatile politics is now focused on
the Kodori Gorge, a rugged area bisecting the
Georgian-Abkhaz border. The militants' basing in the
Kodori makes sense, as it is the home to the Svans, a
small ethnic group that is fairly closely allied to
Tbilisi. If the Svans are aiding the Chechens, as
seems likely, then the Abkhaz have little chance of
rooting either group out.
?????For one, the Chechens would now have ground
support and ample supplies in the area. They would
also be assisted by a group the Abkhaz government has
not been able to completely defeat in eight years. The
Svans' loyalty to Georgia and resistance to the Abkhaz
makes them natural allies of the militants.
?????The militants' actions are fueled by more than
the mere desire for revenge against Abkhazia's
pro-Russia stance; they want to catch Moscow in a trap
of its own making. Russia has staunchly maintained
that the Abkhaz conflict is an internal Georgian
matter, all the while supplying Abkhaz separatists
with equipment, training and direct military support.
?????If the militants attacking the province have
substantial success, Moscow would either have to
abandon Abkhazia or send in heavy forces to protect
its independence, thus abandoning the fiction that it
is not aligned with the separatists.
?????The purported involvement of Ruslan Gelayev, one
of the most powerful Chechen commanders, in the recent
attacks is certainly another factor that will
encourage a direct Russian response. Many of Russia's
diplomatic justifications for staying in the region
could evaporate in the weeks ahead.
?????The Chechen element of the force has its own
additional goal. Russia is slowly losing the
initiative in the ongoing Chechen war. Separatist
fighters are becoming much bolder and are meeting with
greater success, most significantly with the
near-recapture of Gudermes, Chechnya's second-largest
city, in September.
?????
?????Russia shifts crack units
?????Such escalations prompted Russia to transfer some
of its paratroops from U.N. peacekeeping operations in
Bosnia and Kosovo to combat duty in Chechnya. But with
the campaign against Afghanistan intensifying, Russia
now needs its best military personnel in Tajikistan to
guard against Taliban incursions.
?????These new deployments weaken the operational
strength of Russia's forces in Chechnya. The Chechens
know this, which is probably why they've chosen this
moment to send a large force to Abkhazia. If Russia is
unable to pacify Chechnya's 2,000 militants with
75,000 troops, imagine the havoc that 500 Chechens in
Abkhazia could raise for Abkhazia's 5,000 military
personnel.
?????The Chechens' positioning suggests they have no
intention of making a Russian response easy. While one
end of the Kodori Gorge gives them access to Sukhumi,
the other grants easy passage into the politically and
ethnically unstable Russian republics of
Karachayevo-Cherkesia and Kabardino-Balkaria, in the
Northern Caucasus.
?????Local press reports indicate Russia is moving to
beef up its border in hopes of preventing any
incursion. But Russia's track record, or lack thereof,
for sealing borders against Chechens hardly inspires
confidence.
?????Russia is faced with large-scale deployments in
Bosnia, Kosovo, Moldova, Tajikistan, Abkhazia,
Afghanistan, Chechnya and in the Northern Caucasus.
And the last four regions would be the sites of
shooting wars. Russia may have a large standing army,
but it is ill-trained and under-equipped. It is not
clear whether Moscow can sustain such a broad range of
simultaneous combat operations; its anti-Chechen
forces would certainly be weakened in any case.
?????
?????Shevardnadze seeks gains
?????For his part, Georgian President Eduard
Shevardnadze is looking for ways to turn the
escalating conflict to his advantage. He has long used
every diplomatic tool at his disposal to engineer a
Russian withdrawal not only from Abkhazia and South
Ossetia ? a secessionist province also supported by
Russia ? but also from Soviet-era military bases
within Georgia at Akhalkalaki, Batumi, Vaziani and
Gudauta. 
?????His goal now is to supplant the current
all-Russian force in Abkhazia with an international
presence that would greatly weaken Russia's hold on
and influence over Georgia. Unlike previous attempts,
Tbilisi now has several factors working in its favor.
?????First, the West is revamping its view of the
Chechen conflict in light of the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks. Most governments are now more receptive to
the Russian line that Chechens are terrorists, with
ties to Osama bin Laden to boot. Although this would
seem an unequivocal victory for Russia, the fact that
Georgia has several hundred Chechens transiting its
territory certainly gets the world's attention and
raises the chances that Georgia can get an
international security force.
?????Second, the U.N. observer mission already
operating in Abkhazia has utterly failed, as
demonstrated by an Oct. 8 attack in which a U.N.
helicopter was shot down over the Kodori, killing five
U.N. staffers. If the international community decides
to remain engaged, a more robust force would be the
next logical step. Any armed U.N. force would both
bolster Georgian sovereignty and limit Russia's
ability to influence Georgia politically.
?????Third, while Russia is certainly an important
U.S. partner, Georgia remains strategically
significant for Washington. American efforts to
influence Central Asia and the Caspian region depend
on being able to ship the area's petroleum out through
Georgia. That requires a Georgia that is whole and
stable. The presence of American forces in Uzbekistan
also boosts U.S. interests in Georgia as Washington
may need to ship military equipment through the
country for use in Central Asia.
?????
?????Tbilisi: villain or victim?
?????Finally, while Russia is proclaiming that Georgia
is a backer of terrorism, Georgia can make a
convincing case that it is actually the victim.
Russian efforts to back the separatists in Abkhazia
and South Ossetia left Georgia broke and essentially
split into three parts. As the Abkhaz war of
independence showed, Georgia simply cannot fend off an
armed Chechen incursion.
?????It is becoming apparent that the image of Georgia
unable to even patrol its own territory may be exactly
what Mr. Shevardnadze seeks to cultivate. By doing so
he could facilitate the presence of a U.N. or NATO
force in the country. Although this would not
necessarily force Moscow troops out, it would mitigate
Russia's influence.
?????If this is indeed Mr. Shevardnadze's strategy,
the risks are phenomenally high. The Chechens
certainly treat people who use them ? such as the
Abkhaz ? badly. So far only Mr. Shevardnadze's
political savvy keeps America on Tbilisi's side, and
thus Georgia free from Russia's control.
?????If the Abkhaz or Russians can prove Tbilisi
collaborated with the Chechens to engineer the crisis,
then American support would melt away, along with Mr.
Shevardnadze's political career, leaving Georgia
dangling helplessly in front of Moscow's nose.
?????But for now, the strategy seems to be paying off.
Georgia's parliament called on Oct. 11 for Moscow's
forces to withdraw in three months. Russian President
Vladimir Putin responded by saying he is willing to
remove the forces, to the shock of the Georgians who
expected at best a flat rejection.
?????Mr. Putin's statement was peppered with "ifs,"
but it signified a willingness to alter the status
quo. That is already more of a change than Georgia has
seen since 1993.
?????Russia's price for its change of heart is clear.
If it pulls its troops out of Abkhazia, it expects to
get free rein in cracking down on Chechens in the
country. 
?????Georgia is willing to allow that.
?????Tbilisi will let it slip that the Chechens of
Pankisi are beyond its control. Such a statement
probably will lead to direct Russian actions against
Pankisi but would also lay the necessary groundwork
for an international presence on Georgian territory.
Russia would be free to strike a heavy blow against
its Chechen menace, but U.N. or NATO personnel would
be there to document Russian actions.

Peter Zeihan is an analyst at Stratfor in
Austin, Texas, a provider of global intelligence to
private companies and subscribers. Its Web site is Stratfor.com.


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