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Politics,
pipelines converge in Georgia
The downfall of Shevardnadze had its roots
in the rivalry between the United States and
Russia.
TBILISI
-- It looked like a popular, bloodless
revolution on the streets. Behind the
scenes, it smells more like another victory
for the United States over Russia in the
post-Cold War international chess game.
Once, the
game was played out on a truly global scale,
in places such as Angola and Afghanistan,
and was cloaked as a fight between
capitalism and communism. These days, as
Russian power and influence have shrunk, so
has the playing field. The fight for
influence goes on, but the battlefields have
edged much closer to Moscow -- former
colonies such as Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan
in Central Asia, and Azerbaijan and Georgia
in the Caucasus.
Eduard
Shevardnadze used to be one of the chess
masters. Yesterday, he was knocked aside
like just another pawn.
The roots of
Mr. Shevardnadze's downfall go much further
back than Georgia's disputed parliamentary
election, held on Nov. 2, which even his
chief-of-staff has now acknowledged were
rigged. They lie to the east, in the oil
under the Caspian Sea, one of the world's
few great remaining, relatively unexploited,
sources of oil.
Since the
collapse of the Soviet Union, Moscow and
Washington have been jockeying to control
the route that will eventually take these
enormous resources more rapidly to market in
the West. Georgia and neighbouring
Azerbaijan, which borders the Caspian,
quickly came to be seen not just as newly
independent countries, but as part of an
"energy corridor."
The old,
Soviet-era pipeline runs from the
Azerbaijani capital Baku north into Russian
territory, then west to the Black Sea port
of Novorossisk, in the process running
through the troubled separatist region of
Chechnya. Anxious to build a more secure
route, Western investors built a second line
in 1998 from Baku to the Georgian port city
of Supsa. Plans were laid for an even larger
pipeline that would run through Georgia to
Turkey and the Mediterranean.
When these
plans were made, Mr. Shevardnadze was seen
as an asset by both Western investors and
the U.S. government. His reputation as the
man who helped end the Cold War gave
investors a sense of confidence in the
country, and his stated intention to move
Georgia out of Russia's orbit and into
Western institutions such as the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization and the
European Union played well at the U.S. State
Department.
The United States quickly moved to embrace
Georgia, opening a military base in the
country two years ago to give Georgian
soldiers "anti-terrorist" training. They
were the first U.S. troops to set up in a
former Soviet republic.
But somewhere
along the line, Mr. Shevardnadze reversed
course and decided to once more embrace
Russia. This summer, Georgia signed a secret
25-year deal to make the Russian energy
giant Gazprom its sole supplier of gas. Then
it effectively sold the electricity grid to
another Russian firm, cutting out AES, the
company that the U.S. administration had
backed to win the deal. Mr. Shevardnadze
attacked AES as "liars and cheats." Both
deals dramatically increased Russian
influence in Tbilisi.
Washington's
reaction was swift. Within weeks, U.S.
President George W. Bush had sent senior
adviser Stephen Mann to Tbilisi with a
warning: "Georgia should not do anything
that undercuts the powerful promise of an
East-West energy corridor," he said.
After the
energy deals with Russia went ahead anyway,
Mr. Mann was followed by former U.S.
secretary of state James Baker, ostensibly
an old friend of Mr. Shevardnadze, who
warned the Georgian leader of the need for a
free, fair parliamentary election on Nov. 2.
(No such warning was given in neighbouring
Azerbaijan, where outgoing president Heidar
Aliyev handed the presidency to his son in
what observers called a mockery of a vote.
Mr. Aliyev had never been as cheeky with the
Americans as Mr. Shevardnadze.)
After the
vote in Georgia, a U.S. organization called
the Global Strategy Group quickly released
exit poll results that contradicted the
official count, and gave victory to the
party of Mr. Shevardnadze's U.S.-educated
opponent, Mikhail Saakashvili. Richard
Miles, the U.S. ambassador to Tbilisi who
also happened to be posted to Serbia when
Slobodan Milosevic was toppled by a popular
revolt, made the rounds in Tbilisi, lending
tacit support to the opposition's contention
that Mr. Shevardnadze had to go.
Yesterday,
Mr. Shevardnadze went. The U.S.-backed
candidate for president, Mr. Saakashvili,
won the day. And Russian Foreign Minister
Igor Ivanov, after telling Mr. Shevardnadze
there was nothing more Moscow could do for
him, flew from Tbilisi to the coastal resort
town of Batumi in the autonomous republic of
Adzharia to stir up new opposition.
The game
begins again.
The Globe
and Mail; Monday, November 24, 2003
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