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Stabroek News



Who got Georgia into this?
published: Friday | August 15, 2008

Rosa Brooks, Contributor


A woman holding a child stands outside the Civil Registration Centre in Tbilisi, Georgia, yesterday. Hundreds of internally displaced Georgians wait outside the Civil Registration Centre to register their arrival in Tbilisi. Tens of thousands of refugees arrived in Tbilisi to gain official refugee status and qualify for free food and lodging. - AP

(LA Times):

The Georgians have now been punished enough, declared Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Tuesday.

Or maybe not. At press time, Russian tanks were reportedly rolling through the Georgian city of Gori, in violation of a cease-fire agreement.

So, there could be more punishment in store for the Georgians, who were stupid enough to imagine that if they picked a fight with Russia over the disputed region of South Ossetia, Uncle Sam would come riding to their rescue.

Puh-lease. Haven't the Georgians noticed that we're sort of busy in Afghanistan and Iraq?

That, even if we had any available troops, we're not going to get involved in a shooting war with Russia, which has the world's second-largest nuclear arsenal?

That we have no other forms of leverage over Russia these days?

So where did the Georgians get the silly idea that the United States would bail them out?

Maybe from John McCain, Republican heir apparent, whose top foreign policy adviser, Randy Scheunemann, also just happens to be a highly paid lobbyist for the Georgian government.

Whoops, correction! Scheune-mann used to be a highly paid lobbyist for Georgia.

The McCain campaign says Scheunemann hasn't taken a dime from the Georgians since May 15. (Which is lucky for the Georgians, who are going to need all the spare cash they can get to rebuild all the stuff the Russians just bombed).

Cosy deal

According to the Washington Post, the relationship between Scheunemann and Georgia used to be very cosy (not to mention lucrative for Scheunemann).

Between January 1, 2007, and May 15, 2008, while Scheunemann was also a paid McCain adviser, "Georgia paid his firm $290,000 in lobbying fees."

And what did Georgia get in return? Well, no troops, that's for sure. But they got Scheunemann's (expensive) pledge to garner US support for Georgia's admission to NATO and for its claims to South Ossetia, and his commitment to use his ties to politicians, such as McCain, to advance Georgia's causes.

McCain has sponsored legislation supporting Georgia's claims over South Ossetia, an issue on which he was lobbied by Scheunemann's firm.

And as recently as mid-April, Scheunemann was simultaneously taking money from Georgia and actively preparing McCain for supportive calls with Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili.

Is it any wonder that Saakashvili concluded that he had the backing of the US Republican power structure when it came to South Ossetia?

But Scheunemann and McCain aren't the only ones who irresponsibly encouraged the Georgians to think that baiting the Russians was going to work out for them.

President Bush shares the blame. Once he stopped swooning over the soulfulness of 'Vladimir's' baby blues, Bush seemed intent on showing Putin and other Russian leaders that he no longer gave a damn.

The Bush administration sup-ported the 'colour revolutions' in Russia's backyard and denounced anti-democratic crackdowns in Russia - while making excuses for 'friendly' authoritarian regimes elsewhere.

Shut down dialogue

The administration also virtually shut down extensive multi-issue dialogues with Russia that had been maintained by previous administrations, hammering in the message that we didn't care much about good relations with Moscow.

The administration also ag-gressively pushed policies that couldn't have been better designed to enrage the Russians.

At the April NATO summit in Romania, Bush urged a fast track to NATO membership for Georgia. The US also insisted this summer on the deployment of an almost certainly useless missile defence system in Poland and the Czech Republic, virtually on Moscow's doorstep.

Meanwhile, the administration singled out Georgia for the 'Our Best Buddy in the Caucasus' award. The US has supported the development of gas and oil pipelines running through Georgia that will challenge Russia's regional economic hegemony, and provided the fledgling Georgian republic generous economic and military aid, including an overhaul of its forces.

In return, Georgia sent 2,000 troops to Iraq, and the administration pretended to be deaf when Georgian politicians crowed that their newly improved military would be perfect for teaching those pesky South Ossetian separatists a lesson.

Empty reassurances

But it's all gone disastrously wrong for our best buddies, and we're sitting on the sidelines, offering empty reassurances to the Georgians and empty threats to the Russians.

Moscow will stop pummelling Georgia when it decides the Georgians have truly been punished enough.

And this being the real world, punishment will rain down on the pawns — but those who egged them on (to score political points, seek power or gain profit) will, of course, face no punishment at all.

Rosa Brooks is a professor at the Georgetown University Law Center.

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