
There is important wisdom in a passage of Arthur Schlesinger Jr.'s new
Journals, contained in a New York Times review posted today. It involves a post-mortem of the Cuban Missile Crisis by President Kennedy, as recounted by JFK's in-house intellectual.
The Times says: Schlesinger writes that Kennedy resisted seeing the missile crisis as part of a holy war with the Soviets. “Too many people will think now that all we have to do in dealing with the Russians is to kick them in the balls,” he says, after the Soviets back down. “I think there is a law of equity in these disputes. When one party is clearly wrong, it will eventually give way.”
Read reviewThe date set for that recognition is Dec. 10.
President Putin vehemently opposes Kosovo independence unless it's in agreement with its former aggressor, Serbia. He argues that, short of such an accord, uncontrollable warfare will re-ignite to the east in the former Soviet Union, specifically in the breakaway Georgian republics of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
Balderdash. Putin's angst has nothing to do with a highly principled nightmare of dominoes falling and everything to dowith who calls the shots in Russia's claimed sphere of influence.
Putin's own intellectual cadre assert that Abkhazia and South Ossetia rose up in response to Georgian genocide. It is true that indefensible Georgian nationalism at the time is to blame for triggering the separatist revolts of the early 1990s. But what followed was inflamed and assisted by then-Russian siloviki only too happy to give the upstart Georgians a black eye.
Those events are not equatable with Serbia's ethnic cleansing.
Instead, Putin and his brain trust are making an empty threat. Putin no more than the Georgians wishes to re-ignite instability in the Caucasus.
Dominoes will not fall of their own accord in response to Kosovo any more than they did when the other parts of the former Yugoslavia became independent. Neither will Putin manufacture a cause-and-effect.
While Putin chooses to see issues like Kosovo as a humiliating physical blow, they are rather simpler matters. Most of the former Yugoslav provinces long ago chose not to be joined to Serbia any longer. Kosovo is merely the latest.
Labels: abkhazia, chechnya, ethnic cleansing, georgia, kosovo, ossetia, Russia
1 Comments:
Yet, there are very clear parallels between Kosovo and Abkhazia. The Abkhaz population wants nothing to do with Tbilisi – in a way, it would be as hard to imagine a compromise between the Abkhaz and Georgians, as between the Kosovars and Serbs.
True, the domino effect that Putin is talking about might not be as alarming - after all, if there is no one to ignite the match, then what could those separatist enclaves do by themselves?
Russia, in fact could take a gamble and get some of its “friends” to recognize the breakaway statelets (as much as it's not in its interests). Notice Russia's willingness to confront the West over issues such as armament agreement, missile installations in Eastern Europe, etc. Realistically, the recognition of the breakaway regions in the former Soviet Union can take place if Kosovo does get independence.
Time will show I suppose.
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