%0 Journal Article %T The Georgia Crisis: A New Cold War on the Horizon? %A Houman A. Sadri %A Nathan L. Burns %J Caucasian Review of International Affairs %D 2010 %I %X After the Russia-Georgia war, tensions grew in the relationship between Russia and the West. These tensions have occasionally led some to argue that a New Cold War may be on the horizon between Russia and the West. Others have even claimed that the Old Cold War has not really ended. This work investigates such arguments by examining Western ties to Georgia, Russia¡¯s power resurgence, and Georgia¡¯s role in that war. The authors claim that those, who interpret the Russia-Georgia war within a Cold War paradigm, neglect the complexities of that conflict. During similar conflicts, the Cold War is an easily comprehendible and adoptable paradigm for the West, particularly the US. Adopting a Cold War perspective, however, ignores that Tbilisi had a significant role to play in defining the 2008 war. Russia versus West tensions can no longer be characterized by the ideological rivalries of the Cold War. Moreover, the Russia-Georgia war appears to indicate a return to older forms of international rivalry %K New Cold War %K Georgia %K Russia %K US %K EU %K South Ossetia %K Abkhazia %U http://cria-online.org/11_4.html