Categories
Selected Articles

Jacksonville shooter named; Prigozhin’s death confirmed: Weekend Rundown

Share The News

Authorities share new details about the gunman and the victims of an apparent race-motivated shooting in Florida. Russia confirms the death of Yevgeny Prigozhin. And Vivek Ramaswamy says he would have certified Biden’s victory on Jan. 6, 2021.

Here’s the biggest news you missed this weekend.

Jacksonville shooter is identified

Authorities on Sunday named the white gunman who fatally shot three Black people in a race-motivated attack in Jacksonville, Florida, as Ryan Palmeter, 21.

According to police, video shows Palmeter entering a Dollar General parking lot Saturday afternoon and killing a woman in her car before he enters the store and kills two other people. Officials believe the gunman died by suicide as police entered the store.

Follow NBC News’ live blog for the latest on the Jacksonville shooting.

Officials also said Sunday that Palmeter was encountered at Edward Waters University, a historically Black college in Jacksonville, before the shooting. A campus security officer engaged with Palmeter, who refused to identify himself and then left the campus minutes before the shooting.

Palmeter, who wore a tactical vest and was armed with an AR-style rifle and a Glock handgun decorated with swastikas, according to authorities, had left messages for his parents, the media and federal law enforcement officials detailing racial hatred.

“This was, quite frankly, a maniac who decided he wanted to take lives,” Jacksonville Sheriff T.K. Waters said. “He targeted a certain group of people, and that’s Black people. That’s what he said he wanted to kill. And that’s very clear.”

The shooting was the latest act of American gun violence motivated by racist ideology, a national scourge that federal officials have described as one of the most lethal forms of modern domestic terrorism.

Mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin confirmed dead. What now for the Wagner Group?

Russian investigative officials confirmed the death of mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin, citing genetic analysis of the bodies in Wednesday’s plane crash.

Prigozhin’s death leaves an uncertain future for the Wagner Group and its often brutal and destabilizing presence in eastern Europe and the Middle East and across Africa.

Prigozhin and his mercenaries have supported strongmen in Africa and earned riches on the back of it, accused of exploiting gold and diamond mines in some countries in return for military support.

After the deaths of Prigozhin and some of his lieutenants, a power vacuum in the Wagner group could make it easier for the Kremlin and Russia’s military leaders to determine what happens next.

Star swimmer died of fentanyl poisoning

A former star swimmer who was found dead in the U.S. Virgin Islands in February died of accidental fentanyl poisoning, police said Saturday.

Jamie Cail, 42, died of “fentanyl intoxication,” the Virgin Islands Police Department said Saturday, citing an autopsy report from the territory’s medical examiner.

As a teenager, Cail won a gold medal in the 800-meter freestyle relay as a member of the U.S. team at the 1997 Pan Pacific Championships, according to the swimming news website SwimSwam.

At the March on Washington 60th anniversary, new challenges meet a familiar fight for justice

Dozens of marchers and speakers at the 60th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom said many of the same concerns of the historic Aug. 28, 1963, gathering still linger.

The anniversary was billed as a “continuation, not a commemoration,” hosted by a number of groups, including the Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network and the Drum Major Institute, which is modeled after the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s principles to strengthen voting rights and end segregation.  

Martin Luther King III speaks at the 60th anniversary of the March on Washington.Martin Luther King III speaks at the 60th anniversary of the March on Washington. Elias Williams for NBC News

“It’s a shift, a change that has taken place,” said Ann Breedlove, who attended the 1963 March on Washington. “It’s too bad we are still talking about these issues. But our leaders and Black people are speaking louder. We’re tired — sick and tired — of asking for justice.”

Speakers addressed concerns over Black history’s being scrubbed from K-12 education, abortion access, the Supreme Court’s abolishing affirmative action and reversals of LGBTQ rights.

Meet the Press

Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy said Sunday in an interview on “Meet the Press” that he would have certified the results of the 2020 presidential election and that then-Vice President Mike Pence missed a “historic opportunity” to initiate changes on Jan. 6, 2021.

Ramaswamy, an entrepreneur who has closely aligned himself with former President Donald Trump, saw his star rise during the first Republican presidential primary debate last week.

Chuck Todd asked Ramaswamy whether Pence had done the right thing on Jan. 6 by certifying the results of the election. “I would have done it very differently. I think that there was a historic opportunity that he missed to reunite this country in that window,” Ramaswamy said.

He said that had he been in Pence’s position, he would have pushed “reforms” through Congress before he certified the election.

“Here’s what I would have said: ‘We need single-day voting on Election Day, we need paper ballots, and we need government-issued ID matching the voter file.’ And if we achieve that, then we have achieved victory and we should not have any further complaint about election integrity. I would have driven it through the Senate,” he said.

Pence’s presidential campaigned denounced Ramaswamy’s remarks as an attempt to nationalize voting and for a “lack of understanding of how our system of government works.”

You can watch the full interview here.

Politics in Brief

Biden impeachment inquiry: House Speaker Kevin McCarthy signaled movement toward an impeachment inquiry into Biden’s business dealings, calling the move a “natural step forward.”

Newsom vs. DeSantis: Some of Biden’s political advisers see California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s plan to debate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis as a bad idea, saying it carries more risk than potential reward.

Immigration: The Biden administration and New York officials are fighting over what to do about 58,000 asylumseekers in New York City’s care, some of whom are sleeping on the streets as shelters reach capacity.

Iowa voters: Republican caucusgoers in the Hawkeye State are self-described “traditional” conservatives who overwhelmingly say they would use the phrase “pro-life” to describe themselves, according to new data from the latest NBC News/Des Moines Register/Mediacom statewide poll.

Culture & Trends

Bob Barker on the set of "The Price is Right" in Los Angeles, in 1985.Bob Barker on the set of “The Price is Right” in Los Angeles in 1985.CBS Photo Archive / Getty Images

Bob Barker, longtime ‘The Price Is Right’ host, dies at 99

Bob Barker, the longtime host of television’s “The Price Is Right,” who used his combination of comfort-food charm and deadpan humor to become an American television staple, died this weekend. He was 99.

Before Barker took the helm of the game show in 1972, it had faded significantly from its glory days and had been punted by two networks before it landed at CBS.

Barker found the show its own voice, and it has continued to air a decade and a half after he retired.

Read more about Bob Barker’s life and career.

In case you missed it

CORRECTION (Aug. 28, 2023, 1:46 p.m. ET): An earlier version of this article misstated Ryan Palmeter’s age. He was 21, not 29.

Elizabeth Robinson
Elizabeth Both
Josh Feldman

Share The News
Categories
Selected Articles

Putin Killed Prigozhin Over Business, Not Vengeance – Foreign Policy

Share The News

Putin Killed Prigozhin Over Business, Not Vengeance  Foreign Policy

Share The News
Categories
Selected Articles

Putin couldn’t believe how ‘fit’ Biden was when they met for their 2021 summit: book – Yahoo! Voices

Share The News

Putin couldn’t believe how ‘fit’ Biden was when they met for their 2021 summit: book  Yahoo! Voices

Share The News
Categories
Selected Articles

Russia-Ukraine war live: Zelenskiy discusses grain corridor and security in Odesa with Macron – as it happened – The Guardian

Share The News

Russia-Ukraine war live: Zelenskiy discusses grain corridor and security in Odesa with Macron – as it happened  The Guardian

Share The News
Categories
Selected Articles

Ex-Proud Boys leader sentenced to 22 years for role in US Capitol attack

Share The News

2023-09-05T10:01:53Z

?m=02&d=20230905&t=2&i=1643803931&r=LYNX

FILE PHOTO: Members of the far-right Proud Boys, including leader Enrique Tarrio (C), rally in support of U.S. President Donald Trump to protest against the results of the 2020 U.S. presidential election, in Washington, U.S. November 14, 2020. REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File Photo

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A former chairman of the right-wing Proud Boys group was sentenced on Tuesday to 22 years in prison for his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the U.S. Capitol by supporters of Donald Trump trying to overturn the former president’s election defeat.

Enrique Tarrio was convicted of charges, including seditious conspiracy, for his role in planning the storming of the Capitol, when thousands of supporters of the Republican then-U.S. president violently tried to stop Congress from certifying the results of an election that Trump falsely claimed had widespread fraud.

Federal prosecutors had asked U.S. District Judge Timothy Kelly to impose a 33-year prison sentence on Tarrio, who was not present at the Capitol on the day of the violence because another judge had ordered him to stay out of Washington. Prosecutors said he helped direct the attack from Baltimore.

Tarrio’s attorneys had asked for a substantially shorter sentence.

Kelly last week sentenced another far-right Proud Boys leader, Ethan Nordean, to 18 years, less than the 27 years prosecutors had sought. Oath Keepers militia founder Stewart Rhodes in May was also sentenced to 18 years. Nordean and Rhodes had previously been tied for the longest sentence handed down in the case.

More than 1,100 people have been arrested on charges related to the Capitol assault, and of those at least 630 have pleaded guilty and at least 110 have been convicted at trial. Five people, including a police officer, died during or shortly after the riot and more than 140 police officers were injured. The Capitol suffered millions of dollars in damage.

Special Counsel Jack Smith, who was tapped to investigate broader efforts to overturn the 2020 election, has charged Trump, the front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, for trying to keep himself in power.


Share The News
Categories
Selected Articles

AP Headline News – Sep 05 2023 18:00 (EDT)

Share The News

28013281


Share The News
Categories
Selected Articles

South Caucasus maps

Share The News

Russia NC North Caucasus Physical

North and South Caucasus physical map

CAU ethnic groups 3

North and South Caucasus ethno-linguistic map

Caucasus railroads map

South Caucasus railroad lines

Caucasus_ethnic

More detailed ethno-linguistic map of the North and South Caucasus, with language family sorting (NB: does not list Mingrelian or Svan as separate languages or some of the smaller linguistic communities in Dagestan)

CAU ethnic groups 4

The most detailed ethno-linguistic map of North and South Caucasus that I am aware of

Soviet_caucasus1922

Political map of North and South Caucasus after Sovietization in 1922

Georgia_high_detail_map

Georgia political map

saqartvelos-etnikuri-ruka

Ethno-linguistic map of Georgia, 2009

2008_South_Ossetia_war_en

Russian military movements during Russo-Georgian War, August 2008

abkhazia

Abkhazia physical map

abkhazia-unomig-2007-apr-map1

UNOMIG operation in Abkhazia before 2008 Russo-Georgian War

RUS-Georgia-Rep-Map

Changing borders of independent Georgia, 1919-21

geogriaterritoryloses

Georgia “territorial losses” 1921-31

Armenian-political-map

Armenia’s administrative districts

CAU Azerbaijan ethnic map

Azerbaijan ADR and AR

Administrative districts of independent Azerbaijan in 1918-20 versus post-Soviet Azerbaijan

neighbors_map

Map of Armenia and Azerbaijan including Nagorno-Karabakh and the neighboring districts controlled by Armenians

CAU Nagorno-Karabakh

Map of Nagorno-Karabakh in late Soviet period

Nagorno_Karabakh_Ethnic_Map_1989

NB: From 1989 Soviet census. Region now circa 95% Armenian, plus small numbers of Assyrians, Greeks, and Kurds.

Karabah map WaPo

Nagorno-Karabakh and areas of control (U of Colorado, Washington Post)

MS-2016-south-caucasus-map

South Caucasus with major pipelines and Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway (Source: Heritage Foundation)

Karabakh conflict zone LiveUA Caucasus

Primary zone of fighting, plus territory claimed taken by Azerbaijani forces, March-April 2016 (from LiveUAMap, Caucasus page)


Share The News
Categories
Selected Articles

My Opinion: South Caucasus Federation: The International Peace Conference in Baku should be the appropriate setting for the signing of Peace Agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan, including the present government of Nagorno-Karabakh. And, with the addition of Georgia and her former autonomous republics of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the preliminary Agreement on establishment of the South Caucasus Federation should be adopted. International Participants should include Russia, EU, USA, Turkey, and Iran, all of whom will serve as the guarantors of the peace and stability in this and the neighboring areas.

Share The News

SCF.jpg

Geopolitical Development and Its Implications for the Southern Caucasus

My Opinion: South Caucasus Federation – GS 

The International Peace Conference in Baku should be the appropriate setting for the signing of Peace Agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan, including the present government of Nagorno-Karabakh. And, with the addition of Georgia and her former autonomous republics of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the preliminary Agreement on establishment of the South Caucasus Federation should be adopted. International Participants should include Russia, EU, USA, Turkey, and Iran, all of whom will  serve as the guarantors of the peace and stability in this and the neighboring areas. 

Nikol Pashinyan had the courage and the wisdom to acknowledge and to express the truth openly: Russia is not able and is not willing to guarantee the security of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, (despite Ms. Zakharova’s protestations). 

This opens the new road to the major realignment in the South Caucasus. 

This conflict is not about religion, it is about Geopolitics. 

Ilham Aliyev should also have the wisdom and courage to take the extended hand, which in fact this development is. 

The future of the South Caucasus, which share the same geography, history, and culture, is the FEDERATION of the three republics: Azerbaijan, Georgia, Armenia, and the smaller entities related to them. This region is the independent and ancient part of the Western Civilization, although on the very (Caspian) cusp of it. Allied together and with the Western world, this future Federation Of the South Caucasus will be strong, independent, and organic part of the crossroads between the new, emerging Middle East, Russia, and Europe. 

Michael Novakhov | 2:47 PM 9/5/2023 – Post Link

The News And Times Information Network – Blogs By Michael Novakhov – thenewsandtimes.blogspot.com

Share The News
Categories
Selected Articles

My #Opinion: #NikolPashinyan had the #courage and the #wisdom to acknowledge and to express the #truth openly: #Russia is not able or willing to guarantee the #security of #Armenia and #NagornoKarabakh

Share The News

 NT-News-and-Times.png

Selected Articles – The News And Times

My #Opinion: #NikolPashinyan had the #courage and the #wisdom to acknowledge and to express the #truth openly: #Russia is not able or willing to guarantee the #security of #Armenia and #NagornoKarabakh (despite Ms. #Zakharova’s protestations). This opens the new road to the major #realignment in the South Caucasus. This conflict is not about #Religion, it is about #Geopolitics. #IlhamAliyev should also have the wisdom and courage to take the extended hand, which in fact this development is. It seems to me that the future of the South Caucasus states which share the same #geography, #history, and #culture, is the #FEDERATION of the three republics: #Azerbaijan, #Georgia, #Armenia, and the smaller entities related to them. This region is the ancient part of the #WesternCivilization, although on the very (#Caspian) cusp of it. Allied together and with the #WesternWorld, this future Federation Of the South Caucasus will be strong, #independent, and organic part of the crossroads between the new, emerging #MiddleEast, #Russia, and #Europe.
Michael Novakhov@mikenov#Kremlin dismisses #Armenian suggestion that #Russia is quitting #SouthCaucasus https://thenewsandtimes.blogspot.com/2023/09/kremlin-dismisses-armenian-suggestion.html… My #Opinion: #NikolPashinyan had the #courage and the #wisdom to acknowledge and to express the #truth openly: #Russia is not able or willing to guarantee…
posted 1h ago by Michael Novakhov (Mike Nova) via The News And Times
 

 Kremlin dismisses Armenian suggestion that Russia is quitting South Caucasusposted at 13:03:34 UTC via Reuters2023-09-05T12:42:32ZArmenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan attends a meeting with Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev on the sidelines of the Eurasian Economic Union summit in Moscow, Russia May 25, 2023….
posted 3h ago by Michael Novakhov (Mike Nova) via The News And Times
 

TBILISI, Sept 1 (Reuters) – Armenia and Azerbaijan said on Friday that they had sustained casualties in fighting around their common border, northwest of the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh.Armenia’s Defence Ministry said four of its servicemen had been killed and another wounded in shelling near the border villages of Sotk and Norabak. Azerbaijan…
posted 8m ago via reuters.com
 

Moscow Sept. 5, 7:14 p.m.Washington Sept. 5, 12:14 p.m.Ukrainian servicemen riding a tank near the village of Robotyne, in Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia region, last month.Credit…Viacheslav Ratynskyi/ReutersTHE BATTLE: Ukraine’s counteroffensive, launched in early June, aims to reclaim land in the south and east of the country. Its goal in the south is to…
posted 9m ago via nytimes.com
 

SKIP ADVERTISEMENTThe Cuban government said it had begun criminal proceedings against a “trafficking network” that had been recruiting its citizens in both Russia and Cuba for Russia’s armed forces.A priest blessing conscripted men at a recruiting office in Moscow in 2022. The Russian government has taken a number of measures to bolster its military…
posted 9m ago via nytimes.com
 

For nearly as long as Medicare has existed, it has been a notorious budget buster, alarming a wide range of politicians and budget experts. For nearly as long as Medicare has existed, it has been a notorious budget buster, alarming a wide range of politicians and budget experts. In 1983, Ronald Reagan said: “The need for action now is clear….
posted 10m ago via nytimes.com
 

SKIP ADVERTISEMENTKim Jong-un is likely to seek missile and warhead technology in an expected visit to Russia, and he is already getting a public embrace he has long sought.North Korea leader Kim Jong-un with Russia’s President Vladimir V. Putin in Vladivostok, Russia, in 2019. Russia has long been a crucial ally for the isolated North Korea.Credit…Shamil…
posted 10m ago via nytimes.com
 

TBILISI, Sept 1 (Reuters) – Armenia and Azerbaijan said on Friday that they had sustained casualties in fighting around their common border, northwest of the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh.Armenia’s Defence Ministry said four of its servicemen had been killed and another wounded in shelling near the border villages of Sotk and Norabak. Azerbaijan…
posted 2h ago via reuters.com
 

2023-09-05T12:42:32ZArmenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan attends a meeting with Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev on the sidelines of the Eurasian Economic Union summit in Moscow, Russia May 25, 2023. Sputnik/Mikhail Metzel/Pool via REUTERS/File PhotoThe Kremlin on Tuesday rejected a suggestion by Armenia’s…
posted 3h ago via Reuters
 

posted 3h ago by The Associated Press via Associated Press Bulletins
 

 Who is Sergai Dybynyn? Laura Loomer alleges Ukrainian operative was present in Capital Riotsposted at 07:29:10 UTC via opoyi.comUpdated: September 04 2023 11:31:38 PM ETSergai Dybynyn’s role in the events of January 6, 2021, is one of the intriguing revelations following the siege of the U.S. Capitol by pro-Trump supporters. This article delves into…
posted 4h ago by Michael Novakhov (Mike Nova) via The News And Times
 

  Selected Articles – The News And TimesHow to Help Ukraine Win the War of Attritionposted 15h ago via WSJ: World News FBI Knew Ukrainian Spy Was at Capitol Riot: QAnon Shaman – NewsweekFBI Knew Ukrainian Spy Was at Capitol Riot: QAnon Shaman  Newsweekposted 15h ago via “Investigate the FBI Investigators” – Google News Has Putin been missing for a year,…
posted 4h ago by Michael Novakhov (Mike Nova) via The News And Times
 
Germany matches DNA from skulls stolen from African colony to living relatives  The Guardian
posted 3h ago via “Germany” – Google News
 
Video: Vivek Ramaswamy refuses to say whether Putin is a war criminal. Hear John Bolton’s reaction  CNN
 

What may have begun as local grievances has now evolved into much larger implications.
posted 3h ago via JPost.com – Homepage
 

The apparent assassination of Yevgeny Prigozhin in the crash of his private jet between Moscow and St. Petersburg represents an inflection point in Russian-African relations. Prigozhin, as leader of the notorious Wagner Group, had been the point man for Russia in Africa since Wagner first began operations on the continent in 2017. More than a single…
posted 3h ago via nation.africa
 

Updated: September 04 2023 11:31:38 PM ET Sergai Dybynyn’s role in the events of January 6, 2021, is one of the intriguing revelations following the siege of the U.S. Capitol by pro-Trump supporters. This article delves into the allegations surrounding Dybynyn’s presence on that fateful day.Who is Sergai Dybynyn? Sergai Dybynyn, an alleged Ukrainian…
posted 8h ago via opoyi.com
 

Jacob Chansley, known as the “QAnon Shaman,” claimed the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) knew that an alleged Ukrainian spy participated in the riot at the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021.Chansley, who was sentenced to 41 months in prison over his involvement in the January 6 riot but was released earlier this year, said in an interview…
posted 9h ago via newsweek.com
 

Official claims Israeli concessions to Palestinians not a central concern for Saudis and that Netanyahu’s hardline government will ultimately fall in line to approve a deal
posted 19h ago via The Times of Israel
 
The News And Times Information Network – Blogs By Michael Novakhov – thenewsandtimes.blogspot.com

Share The News
Categories
Selected Articles

Geopolitical Development and Its Implications for the Southern Caucasus

Share The News

The last six months have awakened many to the significant geopolitical developments accumulating globally over the past decade. This article attempts to address these developments and their implications for the region.

Geopolitics is a much-debated concept with many definitions. The definition proffered here draws from the etymological roots of the word. “Geo” is about territory or space and resources; “politics” is about power and its distribution. So, “geopolitics” concerns the relationship between territory, resources, and power. Issues such as pandemics, economic exchange, and climate change are also important elements of change in the international system but do not fall in the category of geopolitical developments.

The most obvious geopolitical development of relevance to the southern Caucasus is the war in Ukraine and the deepening confrontation between the West and Russia. The rise of China and its increasing engagement in the post-Soviet space, including the Southern Caucasus is also discussed. Both are symptoms of a broader systemic change: the gradual erosion of what we used to call “unipolarity” or American liberal hegemony.

The War in Ukraine

The first thing to say here is that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is the latest and largest episode of Russia’s meddling with its neighbours in the former Soviet space. That began almost immediately after the dissolution of the USSR. Georgians know this very well from the 1992 and 1993 Russian deployment of “peace-keepers” to South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Another example is the Russian annexation of Crimea and intervention in Donbas and Luhansk in 2014. Most recently, in 2020, Russia deployed a peace-keeping force to police a post-conflict agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan after the latest episode of conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.

In other words, Russia has a long history of military deployment in neighbouring states. This was accompanied by an intellectual justification for building and sustaining influence over its neighbours (the idea of a “near abroad”) that has grown in influence ever since its origins in 1992-3. In 1999-2000, Vladimir Putin came into leadership dedicated to the restoration of a Russian-led regional bloc and committed to preventing further western enlargement.

As Russian military capabilities were restored in the 2000s, Moscow became more assertive in regional affairs. In 2008, Russia invaded Georgia, took full control of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and then recognised the two rebel regions as independent states. In 2014, the Russian Federation reacted to the Maidan protests in Ukraine by seizing and then annexing Ukraine’s Crimea, and then helping separatists in Donetsk and Luhansk to seize and to maintain control over parts of those regions. On the 24th of February of 2022, Russia invaded Ukraine on multiple fronts in violation of international law. Two days before, it recognised Donetsk and Luhansk as sovereign states.

There are three things to note about this evolution. The first is that it reflects an inherently geopolitical effort to consolidate a sphere of influence in the western part of the post-Soviet region to limit the autonomy of neighbouring states. The second is to end eastward enlargement of Western institutions.

So far so good in terms of geopolitical developments. The third element is perception and misperception. Take, for example, the Russian perception of existential threat coming from NATO and EU enlargement. But NATO and EU enlargement to Ukraine was not imminent. Nor did it create any immediate existential threat to the Russian Federation.

More specifically, Putin incorrectly estimated numerous aspects of this conflict, notably the weakness and resilience of Ukrainian forces, the strength of Ukrainian identity, and the strength of Russia’s forces. The Russians went into Ukraine expecting to be met with flowers; they were met with Javelins and Stingers.

The Russian government also underestimated the Western response.

This litany of misperception suggests the incompleteness of geopolitical analysis. It focuses on power and territory without adequate attention to the human factor. Beyond misperception, Russia’s attack was rooted in ideological factors: Putin’s irrational obsession with Ukraine, his profound misunderstanding of Ukrainian history, nationhood and identity, and his deep suspicion of western ill intent all reflect his flawed understanding of the bilateral relationship and of the western view of Russia, rather than objective material facts on the ground. In short, Russian aggression against Ukraine is primarily rooted not in geopolitical imperatives, but in the delusions of their leader.

Whether the war’s origins can be explained geopolitically, its consequences involve a dramatic geopolitical shift in international relations both for the former Soviet region and for Russia’s relations with the West.

Consequences of the War

Concerning Russia’s relationship with the West, Russia’s aggression against Ukraine provoked the most comprehensive sanctions ever imposed on a great power that occupies a permanent seat on the UN Security Council. Military spending has accelerated throughout NATO. Alliance forces are deploying forward toward the border with Russia. Finland and Sweden have both applied for membership, bringing with them large forces with significant military capabilities that are interoperable with NATO. If Russia’s objective was to end NATO’s eastward enlargement, Russia’s aggression against Ukraine achieved exactly the opposite.

The war also produced a significant consolidation of the EU, with the organization joining NATO in the sanctions effort, dramatically increasing EU military, economic, and humanitarian support to Ukraine, renewing its consideration of military and security cooperation in the EU, and accelerating the process of eastward enlargement through the granting of candidate status to Ukraine and Moldova.[1]

Although not a return to the Cold War, the worsening of relations between Russia and the West appears to be creating a new dividing line across Europe. The 1990 vision of “one Europe whole and free” is dead. That carries significant implications for the states lying in between.

In addition, the war has substantially weakened the United Nations, particularly the Security Council, whose principal function is to maintain peace and security. Russia’s veto prevents the Council from fulfilling its responsibilities.

In a broader sense, the war has damaged the international order in that a permanent member of the Security Council is violating basic principles of international law (the sanctity of sovereignty and territorial integrity, and the prohibition of the aggressive use of force), and international humanitarian law (the protection of civilian lives and property). When leading states in international system abandon or ignore these laws, they undermine the normative fabric of international relations.

Another important consequence of the war has been the strengthening of the Russia-China relationship. Russia’s political and economic isolation from the West makes it increasingly dependent on China, by some measures now the largest economy in the world. It has used this wealth to rapidly develop its military to the extent where it is now a serious competitor to the United States in East Asia. Its competition with the West is enhanced by its heavy investments in infrastructure in its periphery (the Belt and Road Initiative). Both Russia and China are illiberal and expansionist. This evolving alignment consolidates the emerging bipolarity in the international system.

Implications of Geopolitical Developments for the Southern Caucasus

The southern Caucasus is no stranger to geopolitical struggle. Given the region’s interstitial location between three great powers and on major trading routes, it has always been a target and a victim for larger neighbours. That is likely to continue.

Regarding Russia, the analysis suggests that the southern Caucasus, and in particular Georgia, faces several challenges. We have understood the revanchist nature of Russia’s policy towards its neighbours for a long time. The war in Ukraine has strikingly revealed the essence of that policy. Dimitri Medvedev’s is alleged to have said recently that Ukraine was not the end of the process of restoring the Russian empire[2] He went on to mention both Georgia and northern Kazakhstan as historically part of Russia and future targets in this reconstitution. The risk here is that Russia may be tempted to revisit its 2008 attack on Georgia, not least in order to seize control of its energy infrastructure of oil and gas pipelines and rail since the Russians are now using energy supply as a weapon in their struggle with the West. In this sense, Russia poses an existential threat for Georgia.

Europe is now divided again. This raises an important question for the southern Caucasus as a whole: once again they are in between rival centres of power. The Russians have always been sensitive to Western penetration of the Caucasus. In the current context, they are likely to be more sensitive. This will require careful balancing by the Caucasian states. On the one hand, they do not want to be on the Russian side of the line, because they value their interactions with the West. On the other hand, tilting too far westward may provoke an unpleasant Russian reaction. The record of the West in defending Caucasian states (notably Georgia) against Russia is not a very good one.

On the other hand, some might believe that the US, having re-engaged in Europe as a result of Ukraine, may strengthen its security and economic engagement with the Caucasus, and notably Georgia. This will likely result in increasing NATO and direct military engagement through the various strategic partnerships. But in contrast to the threat, such engagement will continue to have small effects. And the assistance provided by the US and NATO in the theatre focuses on Ukraine first and the Baltic republics second. The other expensive effort is to balance China in the Pacific. For the moment, there is not much left over.

The geopolitical and geoeconomic rise of China is of less concern. In the first place, their rise is now spluttering because of the economic consequences of their covid policies, continuing problems in global supply chains, increasing difficulty with the BRI initiative, the coming crisis in their financial markets, and a growing western desire to reduce their dependence on Chinese exports. It is unlikely to pose a direct geopolitical challenge in the Southern Caucasus.

Here I should say a word about Turkey, a powerful state contiguous to the region. It played a major role in Azerbaijan’s victory over Armenia in the second Karabakh war. It is also attempting to balance its relations with its western allies in NATO with its deep and growing ties to Russia. The relationship is growing not only because of a shared authoritarian impulse, but also because of strong bilateral economic ties, and the need for cooperation in the Black Sea region. But, to judge from the historical record, Turkey has no interest in having an armed border with a Russia that controls Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia. For Turkey, the Caucasus is a buffer that it would not want to surrender. Turkey remains a problem for Armenia, but not for Georgia or Azerbaijan.

Finally, a word about Iran, the third large state bordering on the Caucasus. The bottom line here is that Iran’s geopolitics is dominated by the “Shi’ite Crescent”, the Persian Gulf, and the ongoing dispute with the United States and Europe over its nuclear programmes. Also, given positive Iranian relations with Russia, it is unlikely to take significant steps in the southern Caucasus.

Conclusion

Two major conclusions can be drawn from this analysis, one theoretical and one practical. At the level of theory, although geopolitics is a useful approach to the study of state behaviour, it fails to account adequately for human agency and perception. As we have seen in the case of Russia’s war on Ukraine, the perceptions and beliefs of leaders strongly influence the tide of geopolitics.

In practical terms, the Russian threat to the region is growing, and the reluctance of the West to bring the Caucasian states into NATO and the EU remains. Given the nature of the Russian political system, even if Putin disappeared, he would likely be replaced by someone with similar views. The penetration of Russian society by national chauvinist and revanchist ideas also suggests that current Russian policy towards its neighbouring region would persist. Russia wants control if not reabsorption of their former Soviet neighbours, and they want to prevent the “intrusion” of the West into their space. Russia is not going away any time soon.

The stalemate in Ukraine appears to have broken southeast of Kharkiv, with Russian forces retreating in considerable numbers. This may be good news, but it is not the end of the story. This has occurred on one small section of the front line. In material terms, Russia remains by far the stronger party in the conflict. Victory is not around the corner for either party. The war will likely go on for some time yet. And, in the extreme possibility that Ukraine ejects the aggressor, that may make things worse for other Russian neighbours.

[1] Georgia also applied for membership but did not receive candidate status. Instead, the Council of Europe decided that Georgia would be invited to candidacy when it addressed the priorities laid out in the European Commission’s opinion on Georgia’s membership application. See Council Conclusions – 23-24, 2022. 2022-06-2324-euco-conclusions-en.pdf (europa.eu).
[2] Mr. Medvedev is a former president and prime minister of Russia and is currently the Deputy Chairman of Russia’s National Security

S. Neil MacFarlane, Lester B Pearson Professor of International Relations, The University of Oxford

Perspective was produced in cooperation with the Heinrich Boell Stiftung Tbilisi Office – South Caucasus Region. The contents of this perspective are the sole responsibility of the author and can in no way be taken to reflect the views of the Heinrich Boell Stiftung Tbilisi Office – South Caucasus Region and Georgian Institute of Politics.
Photo Credit: The Asia Today

Share The News