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Interests over norms in western policy towards the Caucasus: How Abkhazia is no one's Kosovo
Authors:Rick Fawn  Sally N. Cummings
Affiliation:1. Lecturer in International Relations and Director of the Centre for Russian, Soviet and Central and East European Studies , The University of St Andrews , Scotland;2. Lecturer in Politics , The University of Edinburgh , Scotland
Abstract:The potentially numerous cases of ‘genocide’ around the world can now invoke the precedent of NATO's use of military force for humanitarian purposes against Serbia in spring 1999. Such a claim was suggested by Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze over Georgia's disputed former autonomous republic of Abkhazia. The conflict over this former ‘Soviet Riviera’ again demonstrates the constraints behind gaining accurate information on the causes and consequences of a conflict. Particularly, it illustrates the difficulty of determining what constitutes ‘genocide’ and against whom, as both the Abkhaz and the displaced Georgians make such claims. On that basis, each party can expect ‐ and equally fear ‐ a NATO‐style military intervention. In the event, even if both sides view themselves as victims of ‘genocide’ and entitled to such intervention, Western perceptions of strategic interests in the Caucasus prevent this scenario. The determination of injustices, quite apart from their redress, goes unanswered.
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