The ghost of Georgia 2008 should be haunting Kiev right now
Saakashvili thought Washington had his back, but just
like today, the hawks made promises that cooler heads wouldn’t back up.
DECEMBER 15,
2021
Written by
Andrew Cockburn
Current war-party bombast in the cause of Ukraine,
supposedly menaced by massed hordes of Russian armored divisions, routinely
evokes the 2008 war in the Caucuses in which, according to the tub-thumpers’
preferred narrative, Russia attacked Georgia without provocation only to be
forced to withdraw thanks to Washington’s steely resolve. It is therefore
worth recalling what actually happened.
Then, as of now, the conflict was fueled at a fundamental
level by the eagerness of the defense lobby to expand NATO eastwards,
regardless of entirely predictable Russian reactions. By 2008, Moscow’s
erstwhile eastern European satellites, once part of the defunct Warsaw Pact,
had all been absorbed into NATO, despite earlier pledges by Western leaders
that no such expansion would take place. Strategically emasculated in the
Yeltsin years, Russia had grudgingly accepted the process with an ill-grace but
could do little more than protest. By the 2000s, with the momentum of expansion
carrying NATO ever closer to the Soviet heartland, it was no longer realistic
to presume Russian indifference.
Yet the movement was hard to stop. In Georgia, a
charismatic young U.S.-trained lawyer, Mikheil “Misha” Saakashvili, took power
in 2003 and straightaway began offering a welcome embrace to Washington and
requests to join the alliance. To bolster his standing in the American capital, Saakashvili hired Randy
Scheunemann, a Republican lobbyist and the
executive director of the Committee for the Liberation of Iraq, a neocon group
formed in 2002 under the chairmanship of none other than Bruce Jackson, a
senior Lockheed executive and president of the Committee to Expand NATO.
Privately, Washington players felt a little nervous
about their hyperactive protégé, suspecting that he might get everyone into
trouble. As one of them told me, Saakashvili “needed a course of Ritalin to
shut him up.” But in public, it was easy to get swept away. In 2005, George W.
Bush stood in Tbilisi’s Freedom Square and told the crowd they
could count on American support:
“As you build a free and democratic Georgia, the
American people will stand with you… As you build free institutions at home,
the ties that bind our nations will grow deeper, as well. …We encourage
your closer cooperation with NATO.”
Saakashvili worked hard at ingratiating himself with
the friendly superpower, supplying a Georgian
contingent for the U.S.-led coalitions in
Iraq and Afghanistan, and offering hospitality to American intelligence
operations in Georgia itself. Most obviously, NSA interception facilities began
sprouting on suitably sited hilltops. Across Washington, the Georgian president
basked in bipartisan favor among influential figures such as Richard Holbrooke,
as well as Senator John McCain whose close adviser was
Saakashvili lobbyist Randy Scheunemann.
Unfortunately, the burgeoning relationship promoted dangerous overconfidence on Saakashvili’s part. By 2008, he was unabashedly
provoking Moscow, apparently confident that he could win a war with his immense
neighbor. Receiving Bruce Jackson, who by now was heading up yet another
entity, the Project on Transitional
Democracies, Saakashvili demanded immediate
shipment of various weapons systems, including, remembers Jackson, “a thousand
Stingers.” Jackson said that would not happen. “Go f–k yourself,” snapped the
Georgian leader.
Matters came to a head at a NATO summit in Bucharest
in April 2008. Vladimir Putin flew in to say that the alliance’s expansion
posed a “direct threat” to Russia. According to a former senior White House
official who spoke to me, President Bush, accompanied by National Security
Adviser Stephen Hadley, took Saakashvili aside and told him not to provoke
Russia. Sources privy to the meeting tell me that Bush warned the Georgian
leader that if he persisted, the United States would not start World War III on
his behalf.
Bush had arrived in Bucharest eager for an agreement
on rapid NATO membership for Georgia and Ukraine, but he backed off in the face
of protests from European leaders. In an awkward compromise, NATO released a
statement foreswearing immediate membership, but also states: “We agreed today that these
countries will become members of NATO.” Putin
duly took note.
Buoyed by hubris and undeterred by warnings from
Washington, Saakashvili pressed on, ultimately assaulting the separatist region
of South Ossetia, which was under Russian control. “Misha,” Jackson told me
later, “was trying to flip us into a war with Russia.” His confidence may have
been buoyed by back-channel assurances from minions of Vice-President Richard
Cheney that the U.S. would, in the end, come to his aid. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice and National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley feared that
Cheney might indeed persuade Bush to intervene. To ward off this possibility
Hadley ordered his NSC aide Fiona Hill to station herself outside Cheney’s
office and monitor his movements. If he emerged and appeared to be heading to
the Oval Office, she was to call her boss and Rice immediately, so that they
could sprint to Bush’s side and dissuade him from any dangerous notions dripped
in his ear by the vice-president.
Meanwhile, Russian forces had swiftly counterattacked
and were soon deep inside Georgian territory, making sure along the way to
destroy all those U.S. listening posts. Having humiliated Saakashvili they then
withdrew. Despite the underlying parallels between Georgia 2008 and
Ukraine 2021, most obviously the poisonous chalice of aspirant NATO
membership, here are important differences. In the words of a former
senior White House official, who told me: “Saakashvili was a hotheaded
megalomaniac. [Ukrainian President Volodymyr] Zelensky was elected on a peace
platform but is being taunted as weak by his internal opposition.” In
particular, noted the former official, Zelensky’s predecessor, Petro
Poroshenko, in pursuit of a comeback, is challenging him to defy Putin. So, he
added, are the “idiots” in Washington goading Zelensky and his military.
This article was adapted in part from Cockburn’s
new book, The Spoils of War: Power, Profit, and the American War
Machine (2021)
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