IMPLICATIONS: The pattern of Russia’s attack against the OSCE is quite consistent but it is still unclear why the small team of monitors (70-strong in winter and 150 in summer) in Georgia was singled out as the main target. It is one thing to refuse the permission for the OSCE monitors to go to Chechnya where they would have uncovered new evidence of gross human rights violations, but it is an altogether different issue to discontinue the international presence at the border, which Russia should be interested in keeping under close observation. Indeed, the OSCE has been able to check many signals on the alleged movements of Chechen rebels from the Pankisi Gorge in Georgia to Chechnya and back. The unavoidable conclusion is that Moscow does not want its claims about a ‘safe haven’ for terrorists in Georgia’s Pankisi Gorge to be independently checked. In the aftermath of the Beslan school massacre, Russian officials, and first of all Defense Minister Ivanov, issued several threats to deliver ‘preventive strikes’ to terrorist bases beyond the country’s borders. Despite Putin’s ambitious claims about ‘wonder missiles’ and improved power projection capabilities, it is sufficiently clear that Russia’s strategic reach remains limited to its immediate neighborhood. All these statements could certainly amount to nothing more than a grand strategic bluff. Veteran Russia watchers may remember that back in Fall 2000, then Defense Minister Igor Sergeev threatened to deliver air strikes on Taliban-controlled Afghanistan; Russia, nevertheless, has refrained from any participation in international peacekeeping operations in this country. In the Georgian case, however, this bluffing, which started back in September 2002 with Putin’s ultimatum, seems to have accumulated to a critical mass. The desire to ‘teach a lesson’ to Georgia’s dynamic President Mikheil Saakashvili, who scored an impressive victory over Russia recovering control over Adjaria and did not blink during the risky escalation in South Ossetia during last August, could become irresistible. Much like in the confrontation around Tskhinvali, Moscow would prefer to have no witnesses to its brutal ‘pedagogy’, so the OSCE must leave. CONCLUSIONS: Since Beslan in early September, Russia has not seen a major terrorist attack, but there are few doubts that another one would again strike deep and painful. The Kremlin cannot afford yet another demonstration of its inefficiency and helplessness, so a strike against Georgia could be in the cards. Russian Defense Ministry has announced plans for deploying the first battery of Iskander-M tactical missiles, which could become an instrument of choice. An additional benefit would be to prove the effectiveness of this weapons system to potential buyers, mainly in the Middle East. Moscow currently denies plans to export these missiles to Syria, but the prototypes have been exhibited in several arms shows in the region. The strike, if it happens, is certain to trigger massive international criticism. Yet President Putin is confident in his ability to manipulate the counter-terrorist cause and has a potential trump card in his sleeve: Russian troops for Iraq. As for the OSCE, Russia is firm set to continue pushing it into irrelevance and this organization, quite unfortunately, is vulnerable to this pressure. Georgia now desperately tries to shift the monitoring operation under an EU aegis, but the newly-expanded Union has its hands quite full in the Balkans and seems to be in no rush to pick up a confrontation with Russia.
AUTHOR’S BIO: Dr. Pavel K. Baev is a Senior Researcher at the International Peace Research Institute, Oslo (PRIO).