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South Ossetia and the Remaking of the
Post-Soviet World
An Interview with Ronald Suny
BY Khatchig Mouradian
"The Armenian Weekly", Volume 74, No.
32, August 16, 2007
Ronald Grigor Suny is professor of social
and political history at the University of Michigan and professor
emeritus of political science and history at the University of
Chicago. He is the author of The Baku Commune, 1917-1918: Class
and Nationality in the Russian Revolution (Princeton University
Press, 1972); Armenia in the Twentieth Century (Scholars
Press, 1983); The Making of the Georgian Nation (Indiana
University Press, 1988, 1994); Looking Toward Ararat: Armenia in
Modern History (Indiana University Press, 1993); The Revenge
of the Past: Nationalism, Revolution, and the Collapse of the Soviet
Union (Stanford University Press, 1993); and The Soviet
Experiment: Russia, the USSR, and the Successor States (Oxford
University Press, 1998).
Suny is currently working on a two-volume biography of Stalin for
Oxford University Press, a co-edited volume on the Armenian
Genocide, a series of essays on empire and nations, and studies of
emotions and ethnic politics. He has appeared numerous times on the
McNeil-Lehrer News Hour, CBS Evening News, CNN, and National Public
Radio, and has written for the New York Times, the Washington Post,
the Los Angeles Times, the Nation, New Left Review, Dissent, and
other newspapers and journals.
In this interview, conducted by phone on Aug. 12, we talk about the
situation in the Caucasus after Georgia’s attack on South Ossetia
and Russia’s heavy-handed retaliation in August 2008.
***
Khatchig Mouradian—Talk about how the mainstream media in the
U.S. is covering the conflict between Russia and Georgia.
Ronald Suny—The mainstream media is completely off the wall.
It’s echoing the line of the president, the government, and the
presidential candidates. Also, in trying to make sense of the
conflict, the mainstream media is using frames like “Russian
imperialism” and “Russian aggression.” These are old, cold-war era
frames that they are reproducing and the result is a complete
misreading of the situation.
After various developments in early 1990’s and by international
agreement, Russia took up the role of peacekeeper, separating the
Georgians from the Abkhaz and the Ossetians. It has kept its role
relatively responsibly and maintained peace in the area. Of course,
it is correct to say in some abstract way that Russia is not
observing the territorial integrity of Georgia or that Russia is
attacking a sovereign democratic country, but all this misses the
whole point that Russia has been involved in peacekeeping in those
areas for years.
This particular crisis began with [Georgian president Mikhail]
Saakashvilli. He launched a rocket attack against Tskhinvali, the
capital of South Ossetia. The attack came at a very strategic point,
when Bush and Putin were in Beijing and [Russian president Dmitry]
Medvedev was on a cruise on the Volga. Important details such as
these are left out of many reports.
The mainstream media is talking about empire and imperialism. But
what Russia is practicing is, in fact, hegemony. It wants to
dominate its near abroad, just like the U.S. wants to dominate Latin
America—although the Americans also seek global hegemony.
The Russians want to preserve the status quo. They want to keep
Abkhazia and South Ossetia in a kind of frozen conflict situation.
That works for them. They can irritate Tbilisi, keep Georgia from
integrating fully with the West, and try to prevent it from entering
NATO. For the Russians, Georgia’s membership to the military
alliance spells disaster. Baltic countries, many Eastern European
countries, and Turkey are in NATO. If you add Georgia, the entire
western and southern borders Russia would be with NATO member
countries. This is unacceptable for a great power like Russia.
K.M.—How do you explain Russia’s response to Georgia’s attack
on South Ossetia?
R.S.—In the last 15 years, Russia has suffered humiliation
after humiliation. The breakup of the Soviet Union was not popular
in Russia, except among some liberals—and liberal in Russia means
right-winger, traitor. The U.S. had promised not to expand NATO to
Eastern Europe but has done it. In turn, the so-called “colored
revolutions” in Georgia, Ukraine, and Kyrgyzstan frightened the
Russians. They read these revolutions as Western interference,
artificial events conjured up by the West to push forward
anti-Russian elements like Saakashvili and [Ukranian president
Victor] Yushchenko. Then Kosovo gained independence despite Moscow’s
objections.
After this colossal sense of humiliation, of a loss of power,
[former Russian president and current Prime Minister] Vladimir Putin
comes along, oil prices shoot up, and the Russians are making money,
the country is growing, and they begin to flex their muscles again.
If you listen to the Russian rhetoric now, it is about how after
years of humiliation, they are back and they are no longer going to
be pushed around.
K.M.—How far do you think Putin will go after this show of
force?
R.S.—I think the Russians made their point. Confrontation is
not their first choice. They have too much going with the
international community to want to go back behind some kind of Iron
Curtain. They don’t want to be isolated.
K.M.—What do you think about the West’s response?
R.S.—I don’t think it’s an accident that [French president
Nicolas] Sarkozy, [German Chancellor Angela] Merkel, and other
European leaders and diplomats are flocking to Moscow and trying to
resolve this issue. The Europeans see Russia as a part of Europe.
And they are not taking as hard a line as the Bush Administration.
I have to note that the Bush Administration was very influenced by
[vice president Dick] Cheney. The first statement that President
Bush made was not particularly strong, but later, he and the
government adopted the Cheney line.
But the U.S. and NATO are powerless in this situation. They’re
obviously not going to go to war over South Ossetia. They don’t have
much maneuverability. Saakashvili started this, but it’s the
Russians that took it up and have improved their position.
The only thing that Saakashvili and the West can try to do now is
discredit Russia. They’re going to play that card, of course.
They’re going to make Russia look like the aggressor. And, of
course, the Russians play into this image. They brutalize. Why did
they bomb the Georgian city of Gori? They wanted to punish the
Georgians. They wanted to teach them a lesson. And I think they
have. I predict that Saakashvili’s days in power are numbered. What
was he thinking? He’s a very impetuous leader. People in Georgia are
afraid of him because they never know what to expect. He gambled and
he lost this gamble. When you don’t win a war that you initiate—as
the Israeli leaders have learned in Lebanon, and the U.S has learned
in Iraq—then you pay for it.
K.M.—What has changed in the equation after the war between
Georgia and Russia?
R.S.—Small as it seems to be, the tiny little place that few
have ever heard of—South Ossetia—in fact has changed the nature of
the post-Soviet world. Now countries have learned not to muck around
with the Russians. They have always been a hard country to bargain
with. Now they’re saying: if you push us hard enough, we’ll also use
military power. That’s a new dimension.
K.M.—Talk about the situation in South Ossetia and Abkhazia
before and after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
R.S.—In Soviet times, South Ossetia was an autonomous
district and Abkhazia was an autonomous Soviet republic. They had
this official autonomy, but in fact they were dominated completely
by Georgia, particularly during the Stalin period, when [Stalin’s
secret police boss Lavrenty] Beria was close to Stalin. Much
resentment developed. There was a kind of Georgianization that took
place in those regions.
When the Soviet Union began to disintegrate, a very radical
nationalist, Zviad Gamsakhurdia, was elected president in Georgia.
He declared “Georgia for the Georgians.” They were going to have an
ethno-national republic, and the other peoples, who were 30 percent
of the population (hundreds of thousands of Armenians, Azerbaijanis,
Muslim Georgians, and, of course, Abkhazians and Ossetians), did not
figure in their vision. The Abkhazians and Ossetians rebelled and,
with Russian help, declared their autonomy and drove the Georgians
out. There are hundreds of thousands of Georgian refugees from those
areas now in Georgia. Roughly around 1993-94, around the time the
Russians were negotiating the armistice in Nagorno-Karabagh between
Armenia and Azerbaijan, they also negotiated a similar armistice in
Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
The Ossetians and Abkhazians want to be in Russia or independent.
Russia never wanted to annex them and bring them fully to Russia
because of the international law of territorial integrity. Russia’s
position is that you can’t alter borders without mutual agreement.
(In other words, they are against the independence of Kosovo for
good reason, because that would then justify Chechnya’s revolt). The
Russians have held that principle, but when the U.S. backed Kosovo’s
independence, Putin remarked that if Kosovo can do it, why not
Abkhazia and South Ossetia as well?
Unlike Karabagh, where Armenians were an overwhelming majority—they
were about 76 percent in 1989 when the conflict broke—in Abkhazia,
the Abkhaz were only 17 percent of the population and Georgians were
something like 43 percent. (By the way, according to most accounts,
the Armenians may be the largest ethnic group in Abkhazia today).
K.M.—In your book The Making of the Georgian Nation,
you say, “If there is any conclusion to be derived from such a study
of the longue duree of a small nation, it might be that a nation is
never fully ‘made.’ It is always in the process of being made.” How
do you think the current conflict will affect the making of the
Georgian nation?
R.S.—In their own discourse, the Georgians blame everything
on foreigners, the Russians, or minorities. They don’t recognize
their own responsibility for their own fate. Basically, in some
ways, the Georgian state committed suicide by this fierce policy
both towards Russia and its own minorities. The Georgians had to
make a choice: do they try to regain and solidify, consolidate
Georgian national territory with a hard militaristic confrontational
policy that is essentially anti-Russian, pro-West? Or do they try to
negotiate, grant concessions, offer high degrees of autonomy to
Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and also try a more cooperative approach
towards Russia? Georgia has alternated between these choices. The
problem is, they don’t get much from the cooperative approach and
they get frustrated with that.
Saakashvili has taken a harder line. He’s figuring, “I can put
Russia in a very difficult position. I can use the West and maybe
that kind of pressure will both force Russia to come to some kind of
agreement with me and also help me get into NATO.” That was his
gamble.
K.M.—Georgia’s neighbor, Azerbaijan, welcomed Tbilisi’s move
to regain control of South Ossetia and signaled the possibility of a
similar action against its own breakaway republic of
Nagorno-Karabagh. Do you think Azerbaijani officials will act on
their war talk?
R.S.—Russia’s actions are changing things. Had Saakashvili
succeeded, then Azerbaijan would have been more encouraged to try to
do something in Karabakh on its own. If I were Azerbaijan, I’d be
very wary. The events in Georgia have shaken things up. Russia is
once again the major player in the South Caucasus, and it considers
Armenia to be its closest ally in the region. |