In any case, Moscow is unlikely to use this argument. For it is the fundamental legal argument for the independence, from Russia, of Chechnya (which did assert its claim in good time); and it was on the brutal suppression of the Chechens that Vladimir Putin rose to power. There is also an essential difference between the Chechen and Abkhaz cases. In Chechnya the majority of the population were Chechens, who did indeed support independence; in Abkhazia, the Abkhaz themselves were a small minority, and if they are more than 50 per cent today - which is still doubtful - it is only as a result of the large-scale ethnic cleansing of Georgians from their homes. Even if Abkhazia did once have some Soviet legal right to seek independence, the Abkhaz could never have attained it by democratic means.
Instead they have attained, with Russian help, a limbo status that will not turn into genuine independence. And that, of course, is what Moscow wants: the indefinite prolongation of a crisis, creating permanent trouble for, and leverage against, Georgia. Western recognition of Kosovo was designed to end limbo status and to create a permanent solution from which Serbia would also benefit in the long run, becoming a normal state and entering the EU.
Here too, then, there is a fundamental dissimilarity: Russia's aim is to perpetuate a problem, not to solve it. Paradoxical though it sounds, it is surely true to say that Russia has recognised South Ossetia and Abkhazia precisely because it does not expect other countries to do so.
- Migrant Crisis? Europe Hasn't Seen Anything Yet
- Why Palmyra Should Matter To The West
- Corbyn's Rise Makes Cameron Redundant
- No, Jeremy: Politics Is All About Borders Now
- Why 'Lady Chatterley' Still Provokes Us
- For Climate Alarmism, The Poor Pay The Price
- Will Putin's Empire Outlast The Soviets?
- British Witnesses To Lenin's Revolution
- Bibliophiles Beware: Online Prices Are A Lottery
- How Jeremy Corbyn's Coup Hijacked Labour
- Corbyn's Signpost Back To The Ghetto
- Unionists, Don't Despair: Scotland Is Not Lost — Yet
- Britain's Apologists For Child Abuse


















1:10 PM
9:10 AM
12:09 AM
2:09 AM