Type | Journal Article - Strategic Insights |
Title | Ajara: A New Russian Option in Georgia? |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 8 |
Issue | 1 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2009 |
URL | http://calhoun.nps.edu/bitstream/handle/10945/11188/Ajara A New Russian Option inGeorgia.pdf?sequence=1 |
Abstract | This paper assesses indications that Russia might attempt to cultivate separatist sentiments in Ajara as a means of putting pressure on the Georgian government. Ajaran autonomy within Georgia is internationally recognized, although the extent of its self-rule was greatly scaled back after the 2003 Rose Revolution led local despot Aslan Abashidze to flee to Moscow. There are indicators that Russia might be attempting to support an Abashidze-led resistance to Tbilisi in Ajara. While the stronger sense of Georgian identity in the region and the potential for adversely involving Turkey are impediments to Russia achieving an Abkhazian or South Ossetian-style secession in Ajara, such an initiative would enable Russia to further erode Georgian sovereignty and fracture its territorial integrity. In the wake of its August 2008 conflict with Georgia, Moscow may be reviewing the potential for establishing a separatist regime in the Black Sea coastal region of Ajara. The recent conflict saw Moscow drastically alter a status quo in the South Caucasus that had existed for the previous fifteen years, imposing by force a resolution on the major issues in dispute between itself and Georgia, and unilaterally recognizing the independence of the Abkhazian and South Ossetian regions. However, in doing so it removed major elements previously at its disposal for pressuring the Georgian government, other than a renewal of military conflict and the occupation of territory universally recognized as Georgian. It is reasonable to assume that the Russian government is examining new initiatives by which it can pressure Georgia. Russia’s South Caucasus policy has been focused for the last few years on Abkhazia and South Ossetia. By supporting but not recognizing the independence of their governments, Moscow was able to modulate Georgian behavior by playing on its desire for a restoration of national integrity. With these two regions now “independent” and South Ossetia at least far on the path toward annexation, Russia’s new interests in the South Caucasus may have outrun its policy preparations and on-the-ground capabilities. If this is indeed the case, Russia will be raising an entirely new set of issues for dealing with the Georgian government. To be sure, Russia has effectively limitless pretexts available should it choose to reopen armed hostilities. For example, it might allege that continuing unrest in the North Caucasus (Dagestan, Ingushetiya, and of course Chechnya) is the result of Georgian operatives infiltrating from the Pankisi Gorge, or that Georgia is violating the terms of the EU-brokered ceasefire. An even more ominous course was hinted at recently with the publication of police alerts alleging a Georgian program to unleash a wave of terror bombings across Russia.[1] Russia demonstrated in the recent conflict that it has the ability to move its forces across Georgia virtually at will. But its near complete failure to muster international support for its actions implies that it will be looking for a set of options more effective than its on-going economic blockade yet more indirect than force. One means of doing this is to continue the policy previously carried out in Abkhazia and South Ossetia—encourage separatist sentiment in Georgia’s peripheral regions, with an eye to further fracturing the country. This paper assesses indications that Russia might attempt to cultivate separatist sentiments in the Georgian region of Ajara with just such a policy in mind. Properly conducted, such an initiative might enable Russia to erode Georgian sovereignty still further and fracture its territorial integrity by more subtle means than the use or threat of naked force. Ajara is in some ways an ideal candidate for such a policy, as it is an autonomous republic within Georgia, and until recently was ruled by a local despot with little interference from the national government in Tbilisi. By contrast, an attempt to organize a separatist movement among, for example, the majority ethnic Armenians in Javakheti district or the ethnic Azeris who comprise a significant portion of the population in rural eastern Georgia, would find no autonomous administrative structures in place and no tradition of local self-rule. |
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