Saturday, May 26, 2012


Caucasus Report

Abkhazia, South Ossetia Alarmed By Russia-Georgia WTO Compromise

A worker loads a trailer with wine grapes during harvest at a vineyard in the village of Sabue, in Georgia, whose wines have been the target of a Russian ban.
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The de facto authorities in the breakaway Georgian republics of Abkhazia and South Ossetia have expressed concern and outrage over the implications of the Swiss-mediated compromise between Georgia and Russia that paves the way for Russia's accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO). Whether they could thwart the signing and implementation of that agreement was doubtful, however.

The compromise agreement partly meets Georgia's long-standing demand for monitoring the traffic of goods between the Russian Federation and the two breakaway regions. Russia formally recognized Abkhazia and South Ossetia as independent states in the wake of Georgia's disastrous attempt in August 2008 to bring South Ossetia back under its control by military force. The Swiss-mediated agreement reportedly envisages the deployment at both ends of "trade corridors" across Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and at the Zemo Larsi border crossing between the Russian Federation and Georgia, of international monitors from a private company. (Tbilisi had long insisted on the deployment of Georgian customs officials at those border crossings.) The international monitors will report their findings to a "third party" -- presumably Switzerland -- which will then relay them to both Moscow and Tbilisi.

Bargaining Power

Georgia joined the WTO in 2000, thereby acquiring the right to veto membership applications from other countries, including Russia. Since at least 2004, Georgia has used that veto right as leverage in its protracted standoff with Moscow.

In 2004, Georgia pegged its approval of Russia's WTO membership bid to the deployment of Georgian customs officers to check goods transiting the border crossings between the Russian Federation and the republics of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, which had broken free of Tbilisi's control in the early 1990s, and on the lifting of a Russian ban on imports of Georgian wine and mineral water. Tbilisi dropped the latter condition in July 2007.

In early 2008, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili said tentative agreement had been reached with Moscow on setting up joint border-crossing and customs points, including on Russia's borders with Abkhazia and South Ossetia, but the Russian Foreign Ministry promptly denied this. Tbilisi suspended talks with Russia two months later in retaliation for then-President Vladimir Putin's orders to the Russian government to institutionalize contacts with the de facto leaderships of the two breakaway regions. The entire negotiating process was then frozen following the August 2008 war that precipitated Moscow's recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia as independent states. Formal talks were resumed only in March 2011.

'Sabotaging Sovereignty'

The Swiss compromise proposal, which is due to be signed in Geneva on November 9, does not envisage the deployment of monitors on the territory of either Abkhazia or South Ossetia. Even before the details of the compromise agreement were made public, de facto Abkhaz Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Chirikba told the Russian news agency Regnum that "Abkhazia will not tolerate any monitors on its territory, that would be a violation of our country's sovereignty." De facto President Eduard Kokoity similarly said South Ossetia would never allow international monitors access to its borders. The South Ossetian Foreign Ministry for its part affirmed that the republic, as a sovereign state, bases its trade relations with Russia on international law and does not consider the deployment of international or other monitors either necessary or permissible.

The most vociferous reaction to date, however, has come from two Abkhaz opposition parties. The Forum of National Unity of Abkhazia headed by defeated presidential hopeful Raul Khajimba issued a statement on November 7 saying the Russian-Georgian agreement constitutes "an attempt to sabotage Abkhazia's independent status and sovereignty" and "poses a threat to the national security of the Abkhaz state." The statement further predicted that it will seriously damage Abkhaz-Russian relations.

The war veterans union Aruaa similarly expressed concern that "under the pretext of carrying out international monitoring, Georgia is trying to establish control over the state borders of Abkhazia and South Ossetia" as a first step toward downgrading Abkhazia's independent status.

Both groups urged the republic's new leadership under President Aleksandr Ankvab to "take appropriate measures" to defend Abkhaz sovereignty. But however loudly the opposition may scream blue murder, the authorities in both republics have little choice but to accept Russia's perceived stab in the back as the price for its continued financial support and military protection.

Tags: South Ossetia , Abkhazia

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Comments
     
by: Vakho
November 09, 2011 10:16
First of all, Georgia did not attempt to regain control over de facto territories in 2008, it was a self defense against the approaching Russian army.
Secondly, there is no sabotaging sovereignty, the territory belongs to Georgia, and is annexed by Russia.

Please give everything its rightful name
In Response

by: A
November 09, 2011 16:01
I love unbaised commentary
In Response

by: Vakho
November 09, 2011 22:07
Please, for your own education, check some facts
In Response

by: Chechen from: Chechnya
November 23, 2011 16:39
All Chechnya supports our Georgian brothers, their territorial integrity, and their rights to live their way of life. Caucasus is united with Georgia. Allahu Akbar.
In Response

by: Anonymous
November 12, 2011 15:26
You know it is so said to read you.. Just one question. Why do you try to deceive all around ?
In Response

by: George from: Nantes
November 14, 2011 03:05
Vakho, you are clearly a Georgian, and unfortunately quite biased and misled in your comments. The fact remains that Abkhazia and Alania want nothing to do with the neo-nationalist and extreme "nation" that is Gurjistan and thankfully they have been successful in getting out of your borders (placed there by your brother Iosef Stalin). There were substantial reports and evidence that Georgia tried to commit genocide in Tskhinvali and were going to march to Abkhazia next, so please stop lying. I know you Georgians come here on a daily basis and spew your trash for the ignorant among us (the audience) to read, but I'd like to believe that the majority of people who read this site have some basic (and correct) knowledge of the events in this region. As much as your people try to falsify the facts about modern as well as past history and events, there are ten more of us worldwide who know the truth and laugh at your attempts to change the reality. Honestly, isn't that money that you spend on such frivolous activities like sending youth to Europe and the US to lie to others, unnecessary military equipment, bribes, etc. more better spent on your near-starving, malnourished, extremely poor people? Poverty levels in Gurjistan is nearly 50% how do you justify this shamefulness? Instead of crying about your so called "lost territories" here, go do something substantial for your people, and maybe close those neo-Nazi camps for children you have running, creating another hateful generation of Gurjis that no one likes anywhere. Change your habits. And no matter what trash you write to me, I will laugh, because deep down inside you know, everyone else knows, and I know that I am right.
In Response

by: Alexandre. from: The Netherlands.
November 17, 2011 15:55
Josef Stalin was born in Gori, from georgian father and ossetian mother. It¨s true. Not about georgian genocide in Tsinvali...Read russian journalists reports form Tsinvali : How russian tamnks got inside the city destroying every building and shouting everyone, because they emptied the city before 8 August ( They sent ossetians families to Vladikavkaz. 2008...Why? Because they were ready in Java town with tanks to roll over Tsinvali, and since April 2008 Chechens special forces ( killers like Vasayev in Abhazia in nineties ) were ready to fight against georgian army in georgian soil. Now, if you don´t like read thrue from me...Call me georgian also.
Ah! And georgians Kings were Colchis and Abhazia kings, like Bagriatoni´s family, it´s also history, not cheap propaganda, to rewrite the history.
In Response

by: Alexandre. from: The Netherlands.
November 17, 2011 16:12
Dear George, could you, please explain me why russian Federation don´t apply the same rule to Chechnya peoples right to be independents ? Or Tatars ? Or Ingush ? Or Daghestan ? Russia can give an example and later ask to neighbouring countries about internals affairs policy...First clean your home and after see what your neighbour do ( Russian clean people from all lands that they want. It´s is imperialism. Comunist imperialism? I don´t understand, is like to be nationalist and socialist ? ( Nashi ) Or what ?
In Response

by: LES from: America
November 28, 2011 21:58
Dear George from the Kremlin,

Kremlinoids always use the term "Nazi" for non-Russians because they are still trying to bamboozle the world into thinking that Moscow did not start WWII in cohorts with Hitler and the Nazis. Kremlinoids refrain from mentioning that Moscow bombed the civilian women and children in Helsinki - without a declaration of war - in 1939, because those facts are not included in the homo-sovieticus Soviet Encyclopedia. Homo-sovieticus decided to use the term "Great patriotic war" (6/22/41 - 5/9/45) rather than WWII (3/15/39 - 8/15/45) even though WWII continued for most Eastern European (and Germany) countries until the 1980's or 1990's, because of the systemic occupation and enslavement by Moscow and the Kremlin's KGB.

Unfortunately, for Georgia, the ungrateful barbarians in the Kremlin decided to invade An Eastern European country in 2008 {Georgian territory}, AGAIN!

Georgia lost about 50% of their male population helping to save the USSR. {Actually, the USSR was just a huge Potemkin village put on the map of our planet - in reality it was just a continuation of Muscovy}

After what Moscow did to Georgia in 2008 - in "gratitude" for saving Moscow, the Georgian "Red Army" veterans must be rolling over in their graves.

Sincerely,

LES

PS I do not have an ounce of Georgian blood. I just enjoy reading (mainly non-American sources - Including Russian sources) about the blessed destruction of the USSR {AKA - Muscovy}, and hope for the further breakup of Muscovy.


PPS If anyone honestly believes that Georgians, Ukrainians, Latvians, or Estonians [etc] were Socialist and wanted to be in "union" with the Moskali, then they would be plainly insanely delusional.

by: Alexandre. from: The Netherlands.
November 09, 2011 17:20
Independence? I know about Georgian -Russian war in Abhazia and Samachablo in nineties, Abhazia voted independence without mayority in Autonomic Parlament, because georgians parlamentarians were not there to vote...After russian airpalnes bombed georgian soldiers, and russian artillery bombed Sujumi´s market, killing civil people, abhazians and georgians. They don´t care about people. clean Abhazia of Georgian people and after clean the land...They ask for International Recognition. Bad Joke, Ivanes. Only comunist regimes of Venezuela and Nicaragua recognized so called Independence, and Nauru...After receive some amount of US Dollars from Russian Federation. Really painfull for Ossetians and Abhazians that cannot come back home.
If you are comunist or you need russian gas pipelines, like Germany, I understand your bussiness, but not double moral at all. Do you remember Democratic Republic of Germany ? I do, and what about them ( included Merkel ).

by: Peter Lawton from: Bahamas
November 10, 2011 20:44
Russia will ditch this agreement after joining WTO. Like China has broken all agreements after joining WTO.
In Response

by: Rasto from: London
November 11, 2011 12:44
At least that agreement hit a biased sense of the selfrighteousness of the Abkhazian ans SO so called governments who feel that current Status Quo is as solid as rock and an justifiable and just result for all interested parties.

by: j. from: georgia
November 14, 2011 07:39
The article is biased. Georgia did not attempt to regain control of S. Ossetia in the 2008 War. Georgia reacted to a perceived Russian invasion. Anyone with a brain in their head could read numerous sources and come to this conclusion. It was a cleverly baited trap set by the Russians to draw Georgia into a conflict. One month prior to the war Russia had over 8,000 soldiers just north of the border conducting exercises. Start with the books by Cornell and Asmus. If you don't believe the facts, yes FACTS, they present, then you are simply deluded. And whoever wrote this article should edit the statement to reflect this, or why would i believe anything else in the artciicle.

by: NZ Happy to be here. from: Caucasus
November 22, 2011 16:11
I have been amazed at the energy, intelligence and enthusiasm of the people of all ages I have met in this region. The comments in this forum are totally understood but such a waste of time. Excuse me for being positive.

About This Blog

Written by analyst Liz Fuller, the "Caucasus Report" blog will offer the sort of in-depth analysis that was the hallmark of the "RFE/RL Caucasus Report." It also aims, to borrow a metaphor from Tom de Waal, to act as a smoke detector, focusing attention on potential conflict situations and crises throughout the region.