Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Eurasia Daily Monitor - 04/20/2006

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Eurasia Daily Monitor - 04/20/2006

    Eurasia Daily Monitor -- The Jamestown Foundation
    Thursday April 20, 2006 -- Volume 3, Issue 77

    IN THIS ISSUE:
    *Moscow protests Jamestown seminar on North Caucasus
    *Bakiyev, Putin to discuss U.S. presence in Kyrgyzstan
    *Russian ban turns from Georgian wine to mineral water

    RUSSIAN REACTION TO JAMESTOWN CONFERENCE REVEALS KREMLIN FEAR OF FREE
    SPEECH ABOUT THE SITUATION IN THE NORTH CAUCASUS

    On April 18 the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs presented William
    Burns, the U.S. Ambassador in Moscow, a note of protest in connection
    with a Jamestown Foundation-sponsored seminar that took place in
    Washington on Friday, April 14, "Sadullaev's Caucasian Front: Prospects
    for the Next Nalchik."

    As the Foreign Ministry noted, "in the course of the seminar the
    participants called for new terror acts on the territory of Russia." The
    U.S. Ambassador was reminded, "The conduct of such activities on the
    territory of the U.S. is incompatible with the international obligations
    of the United States in the sphere of struggle against terrorism," in
    particular with UN Security Council Resolution 1624, "Threats to
    International Peace and Security," which the United States played a
    major role in developing. "The fact that Washington DC tolerates Chechen
    gunmen and separatists is incompatible with the spirit of partnership
    that would be necessary for anti-terrorist coordination of the two
    countries and it is also harmful for bilateral relations," according to
    the note (gazeta.ru, April 18).

    The public discussion organized by Jamestown took place at the
    conference facilities of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
    in Washington, DC. Five people made presentations, including Glen E.
    Howard, president of the Jamestown Foundation; Ivan Sventsistski, an
    independent Russian journalist and coordinator of the Yalta Initiative
    for Peace in Chechnya; Dr. Andrew McGregor, director of Aberfoyle
    International Security in Toronto; Kelly McEvers, an American journalist
    who was arrested in Dagestan and deported from Russia at the beginning
    of April (see Chechnya Weekly, April 6); and Mairbek Vatchagaev, a
    Chechen historian who now lives in France and was previously a spokesman
    for Aslan Maskhadov, the Chechen rebel leader killed last year. All the
    participants spoke about the deteriorating situation in the North
    Caucasus, the rising frustration among the local population, and the
    possibility of a rebel attack in any part of that region.

    Two officials from the Russian Embassy to the United States attended the
    event as observers. They were accompanied by journalists from the
    Kremlin-controlled ORT television network. ORT broadcast a story about
    the event on the popular 9 pm news program that night. The panelists
    were surprised to learn from the ORT story that they had planned new
    terrorist acts in Russia during their discussion in Washington.

    "The statements that are made in the USA imply that new, large-scale
    acts of terrorism in Russia are necessary," according to the ORT
    headline. "As a matter of fact, the presented subject of the event is
    ‘Perspectives of the New Nalchik.' These perspectives were treated
    with sympathy" (ORT, April 14).

    The note of protest from the Russian Foreign Ministry likely had been
    prepared in advance so that Russian authorities were ready to condemn
    the discussion irrespective of its content. The ORT report about the
    conference was needed to provide grounds for a protest to the American
    ambassador. ORT and the Russian authorities likely had coordinated their
    actions.

    Clearly, the Kremlin was enraged just by the title of the discussion:
    "Sadullaev's Caucasian Front." Unlike in the United States, where the
    government encourages public research on terrorism issues and open
    analysis of al-Qaeda statements and publications on websites belonging
    to Islamic radicals, in Russia such topics are the exclusive prerogative
    of the authorities.

    The Kremlin is not interested in providing either Russian society or the
    international community with detailed information about the Caucasian
    insurgency. Instead, officials in Russia use vague terms like
    "international terrorism" or "dark forces" to describe the source of
    instability in the south of the country. Sometimes some "unknown Arabs"
    are mentioned, but never actual insurgency leaders such as Abdul-Khalim
    Sadullaev. Nor does official Moscow recognize the existence of the
    Caucasian front, preferring to speak about "the criminal underground in
    the North Caucasus."

    The Russian authorities do not want to focus on Sadullaev, as his
    presence proves that the insurgency across the North Caucasus is
    directed from Chechnya by Chechen separatists, not by terrorists from
    Saudi Arabia or Afghanistan, as official propaganda claims. The
    authorities were even angrier about the fact that Vachagaev called
    Sadullaev the "Chechen president," trying to present the rebel leader as
    a legitimate figure in the eyes of the Americans. Since Abdul-Khalim
    Sadullaev succeeded Maskhadov after the latter's death last year, the
    Kremlin has used a number of devices to hide his name from the West,
    fearing that one day Western governments will start to persuade Moscow
    to initiate a dialogue with him. Previously they had called on Russia to
    negotiate with Maskhadov.

    Russian authorities are also afraid of any accurate, thorough analyses
    of the situation in the North Caucasus. As it increasingly loses control
    over the region, Moscow has tried to make it off-limits to foreigners by
    deporting journalists and humanitarian-aid workers. Public discussions
    like the Jamestown forum on April 14 are considered as threatening to
    the Kremlin as independent, inquisitive journalists who try to enter the
    volatile region.

    There is one more reason for the Russian authorities' pained reaction to
    the Jamestown event. The Kremlin is watching closely the emerging
    dispute between two influential groups in the U.S. government. One,
    headed by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, stands for a pragmatic
    approach in U.S. policy towards Russia. The other group, led by
    Vice-President Dick Cheney, believes that Washington should be tougher
    in criticizing the policies of Russian President Vladimir Putin. It is
    no accident that the ORT report specifically tried to link Cheney with
    the Jamestown Foundation (ORT, April 14).

    Many high-ranking Russian officials subscribe to a variety of conspiracy
    theories, and Putin's entourage suspects that "anti-Russian forces"
    headed by Cheney are behind the Jamestown conference on the North
    Caucasus. The Russian leadership, which has established a "managed
    democracy" under which nothing can be done without permission from the
    authorities, simply cannot believe that a public discussion on a burning
    political issue could be solely the initiative of an independent,
    non-partisan organization.

    --Andrei Smirnov


    MOMENT OF TRUTH IN KYRGYZSTAN FOR U.S. POLICY

    American strategic and democratic interests in Kyrgyzstan are
    increasingly coming under pressure, one year after the purported
    democratic "Tulip Revolution" in that country. Russian influence and
    that of local organized crime groups are growing while U.S. influence is
    steadily eroding. At the overt level, Moscow relies on President
    Kurmanbek Bakiyev and Minister of Foreign Affairs Alikbek Jekshenkulov
    to pursue its interests in Kyrgyzstan. Bakiyev, a pro-Kremlin though
    weak president, in turn appears to rely on a modus vivendi with
    representatives of organized crime in hopes of navigating the chaos that
    has engulfed the country since the 2005 "revolution."

    The sequence of events in the run-up to Bakiyev's April 24-25 visit to
    the Kremlin is dramatizing those trends and had impelled the United
    States for the first time to speak out publicly in Bishkek about the
    country's direction.

    On April 18, Jekshenkulov warned in a Russian media interview that
    Kyrgyzstan is asking for a "hundredfold increase" in the rent paid by
    the United States for using the Manas air base located near Bishkek. The
    issue has been under discussion since autumn 2005 when Bakiyev raised it
    at Moscow's instigation (see EDM, September 22, 2005). The Pentagon-paid
    rent has been shared since 2002 among the Manas airport company, the
    Kyrgyz Defense Ministry, and local authorities for the rented land plot.
    At present, a Kyrgyz working group is preparing "economic
    justifications" for the hundredfold-increase demand (Interfax, April
    18).

    At a joint news conference with Jekshenkulov that same day, Russian
    Ambassador Yevgeny Shmagin advised unnamed foreign ambassadors --
    apparently meaning primarily the U.S. ambassador -- "not to teach our
    Kyrgyz friends politics and economics. They [these Kyrgyz friends] have
    their heads on their shoulders and are capable to take the right
    decisions." The conference previewed Bakiyev's upcoming visit to Russia
    (Akipress, April 18).

    Also on April 18, a Kyrgyz Ministry of Foreign Affairs communiqué
    criticized U.S. Ambassador Marie Jovanovich for "interfering in internal
    affairs," exercising "pressures on the Kyrgyz leadership," and "going
    beyond the scope of diplomatic relations" in her statements. The Kyrgyz
    MFA communiqué asked Jovanovich to refrain from making public
    statements on the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative (HIPC) and
    "other issues" and to observe the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic
    Relations. Ostensibly, the MFA communiqué took issue with her public
    advice to the Kyrgyz government to join HIPC, a debt-relief program of
    the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. (Kyrgyzstan's external
    indebtedness is estimated at approximately billion.) (Interfax,
    Itar-Tass, April 18).

    In fact, the broadside was responding to Jovanovich's April 17 media
    interview, in which she described some aspects of the situation in
    Kyrgyzstan with a realism that had been missing from official Washington
    evaluations: "Journalists are scared. Members of Parliament are openly
    stating that they are scared. Threats against the Central Electoral
    Commission are worrisome. Even the police are frightened. Investors and
    donors are raising questions about the direction in which Kyrgyzstan is
    moving. … The judiciary must be free from corruption. We keep
    saying that the state must take decisive measures against organized
    crime" (Akipress, Interfax, April 17).

    Triggering the interview was the apparent assassination attempt in broad
    daylight in Bishkek on April 12 that severely injured Edil Baisalov,
    leader of the Coalition for Democracy and Civil Society (Institute for
    War and Peace Reporting [London], April 14, also see EDM, April 14). The
    Coalition is an influential pro-American, non-governmental organization
    that combines a democracy agenda with moral support for the U.S.
    military presence in Kyrgyzstan. The previous day, Baisalov had given an
    unsparingly realistic presentation of the situation in the country to
    the visiting Richard Boucher, newly appointed U.S. Assistant Secretary
    of State for South and Central Asian Affairs.

    On behalf of his and other NGOs, Baisalov told Boucher, "Unfortunately,
    the situation has seriously worsened after the revolution. Our hopes
    have not been realized." The state is unable to take measures against
    rampant organized crime, Baisalov pointed out. He went on to criticize
    Bakiyev for reneging on the promises he had made to the Kyrgyz people,
    and also to U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice during her visit
    last fall, that he would transfer some of ex-president Askar Akayev's
    presidential powers to the government and parliament, so as to establish
    a constitutional division of power. Thus, "His promises have proven
    empty words. We told Mr. Boucher that the president has deceived us
    all," Baisalov announced (Kyrgyz radio, Kabar, April 11).

    Jovanovich's assessment in her interview, while couched in proper
    diplomatic language, parallel the substance of Baisalov's assessment.
    Since the March 2005 regime change in Kyrgyzstan, the United States has
    preferred to refrain from commenting on the unanticipated consequences
    of what it initially portrayed as a triumph of democracy. With the
    situation continually deteriorating, and Russia regaining strategic
    influence over the country, a reassessment of U.S. policy seems timely.

    --Vladimir Socor



    RUSSIA CONTINUES TO PRESS GEORGIAN WINE INDUSTRY

    After banning imports of Georgian wine and some other food products last
    month (see EDM, March 28), Russian authorities now say the ban might
    extend to Georgia's famous "Borjomi" mineral water. Following an order
    from Gennady Onishchenko, Russian chief sanitary inspector, about 1
    billion liters of Georgian and Moldovan wine have been confiscated from
    retail and wholesale depots throughout Russia.

    There are rumors that the deportation of multiple illegal Georgian labor
    migrants will be Moscow's next "surprise," and this move, according to
    pundits, might trigger large-scale social disturbances in Georgia
    (Akhali Taoba, April 17).

    On April 19, the Russian State Duma overwhelmingly voted for a
    resolution supporting the ban on the import of Georgian and Moldovan
    alcoholic beverages. Although the resolution cites health issues, the
    pronounced anti-Georgian rhetoric accompanying the resolution
    highlighted the political implications behind this development.

    Georgian officials and observers consider the Russian move to be one
    more politically motivated attempt to punish the Western-leaning
    government of Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili. However, other
    analysts argue that the ban on Georgian wine is part of a clandestine
    business war, and some Russian companies that own wineries in Latin
    America are trying to saturate the Russian market with their products
    and push out foreign competitors.

    President Saakashvili has declared that saving the Georgian wine
    industry must become a top priority. "We all must become publicity
    agents for Georgian wine," he said (TV-Rustavi-2, Civil Georgia, April
    15).

    The "wine war" has increased existing Georgian-Russian political
    friction. Some top Georgian officials have threatened to take Georgia
    out of the Commonwealth of Independent States. Georgian Foreign Minister
    Gela Bezhuashvili pointedly declined to participate in the April 21
    meeting of the CIS Ministers' Council in Moscow (Kavkaz Press, April
    17).

    With no Georgian wine flowing into the Russian market, other CIS members
    seized the opportunity. Armenia, Azerbaijan, Tajikistan, and Kazakhstan
    reportedly hastened to fill the temporary supply gap -- about 12% of the
    Russian market -- by offering their own wine products to Russian
    consumers (Akhali Taoba, April 15).

    At a meeting with parliamentarians from the ruling National Movement
    party on April 17, Saakashvili reiterated his belief that Russia's
    import ban is a political move. He reaffirmed his readiness for a
    "constructive dialogue" with Russia to settle the wine row and reminded
    members of the government to promote Georgian wine abroad.

    The wine war with Russia will not be settled soon, predicted Kakha
    Bendukidze, Georgian State Minister for Reform Issues. "They want us to
    pay a political price, which we will not pay" (TV-Imedi, TV-Rustavi-2,
    Civil Georgia, April 17). Contrary to the gloomy forecasts by some
    Georgian economic analysts, Bendukidze said that Russia's ban would have
    minimal effect on Georgia's economy and "even in a worst-case scenario
    the growth rate will decrease by approximately 0.3%." He said that
    thanks to high levels of wine consumption in Georgia, producer prices
    for grapes were unlikely to fall. He acknowledged that local vintners
    might see their profits drop, but dismissed fears of an impending
    "catastrophe." He said that the wine dispute might actually benefit
    Georgia somewhat, "Because the stronger companies will survive and the
    wine industry will become much healthier" (Georgian Public TV,
    April 16).

    The Georgian government has already granted wine producers a three-month
    tax holiday. Despite the optimistic statements from Bendukidze and
    Saakashvili, who claims that the "wine war" with Russia marks "a new
    stage for Georgia's political and economic strengthening" (TV-Rustavi-2,
    April 17), some Georgian officials and analysts -- not to mention
    vintners -- are concerned about the immediate troubles that the dispute
    could create for the Georgian wine industry, agriculture in general,
    banking, and the entire national economy. Georgia exports 70% of its
    agricultural products, 80% of its wine, and 60% of all Borjomi sales to
    Russia. Some sources say that about 30% of Georgia's GNP comes from
    exports of wine and other beverages to Russia. In 2005 Georgia exported
    60 million bottles of wine; 40 million of these went to Russia. In 2005
    Georgian wine exports to Russia were valued at
    million, up from million in 2004 and million in 2003, according to the
    Georgian Department of Statistics.

    Some Georgian pundits argue that the Russian restrictions, if continued,
    will harm Georgian banks, which finance export-import operations and
    issue credits for the companies in this sector. Taking into account that
    the Georgian financial sector is very small; downgrading the credit
    portfolio of many Georgian banking institutions might result in a
    banking crisis, according to their forecast. Some analysts argue that in
    the near future Russia might allow some Georgian winemaking companies
    with 100% Russian capital to resume wine exports to Russia.

    Niko Lekishvili, chair of the Georgian Parliamentary Economic Committee,
    said that the ban would bankrupt most Georgian wine companies, because
    they owe millions in loans and back taxes. "We will lose approximately 0
    million annually if the ban continues," he said (The Messenger, April
    3). The ban will also hurt the many peasants involved with wine
    production and grape harvesting.

    Meanwhile, Georgian media and analysts are guessing about Saakashvili's
    surprise decision on April 12 to assign Defense Minister Irakli
    Okruashvili to find new markets for Georgian wine. Most of them link
    this move with an anticipated reshuffle in the government (Resonansi,
    April 17). Okruashvili demonstrated a remarkable familiarity with wine
    issues when commenting on his new task. He said that many Georgian
    winemaking firms are weak in marketing and management and several
    semi-legal wineries in Georgia should be closed immediately (TV-Imedi,
    TV-Rustavi-2, April 12).

    Despite the government's calls to focus on new markets, Georgian
    vintners consider restoring the Russian market to be their top priority
    (Civil Georgia, April 19).

    --Zaal Anjaparidze

    The Eurasia Daily Monitor, a publication of the Jamestown Foundation, is
    edited by Ann E. Robertson. The opinions expressed in it are those of
    the individual authors and do not necessarily represent those of the
    Jamestown Foundation. If you have any questions regarding the content of
    EDM, or if you think that you have received this email in error, please
    respond to [email protected].

    Unauthorized reproduction or redistribution of EDM is strictly
    prohibited by law.



    The Jamestown Foundation
    4516 43rd Street, NW
    Washington, DC 20016
    202-483-8888 (phone)
    202-483-8337 (fax)
    http://www.jamestown.org



    Copyright (c) 1983-2005 The Jamestown Foundation.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X