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  • The self-determination snowball

    ISN, Switzerland
    June 3 2006

    The self-determination snowball

    BBC
    By Simon Saradzhyan in Moscow for ISN Security Watch (02/06/06)


    After years of paying lip service to the territorial integrity of
    Georgia and Moldova, Russia has moved to side with the separatist
    regimes on the territories of these two newly independent states in
    an apparent effort to pre-empt an increase in Western alliances'
    influence in a region that Moscow views as a zone of its strategic,
    if not exclusive interests.

    Russia's Foreign Ministry signaled the rhetorical shift on Thursday
    with two senior diplomats publicly touting the idea that Moscow may
    recognize the right of South Ossetia and Transdniester to secede from
    Georgia and Moldova, respectively.

    "The expression of will of the people is the highest instance for
    determining the fate of those who live on a concrete territory,"
    Ambassador Valery Nesterushkin, the Foreign Ministry's special envoy,
    said. "This is at least how a referendum is perceived through [the
    prism of] international law."

    Officially, Nesterushkin was commenting on a statement by the head of
    the self-styled Transdniestrian Republic, Igor Smirnov, who announced
    earlier on Thursday that this separatist province in Moldova may hold
    a referendum on independence by September.

    In reality, Nesterushkin was also firing back at Belgian Foreign
    Minister Karel De Gucht, who is also the chairman of the Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). Gucht called on
    Thursday for Russia to withdraw its 1,200 soldiers from this province
    of 400,000 so that an international peacekeeping force could be
    installed there. He even offered 10 million (US$13 million) out of
    the OSCE budget to finance the withdrawal of those troops, which have
    remained there since the separation of Moldova and Transdniester
    after the two sides went to war in 1992, according to Russia's
    Kommersant daily newspaper.

    "It is important to start discussions on transforming the
    peacekeeping operation in Moldova into an internationally mandated,
    recognized operation that could enhance security and stability for
    both [Trans]Dnestr and Moldova," De Gucht told a news conference in
    Tiraspol, Transdniester's capital.

    And the Moldovan side has repeatedly accused Russia of supporting the
    separatists to keep the conflict unresolved so that Russia can
    maintain leverage on both sides and preserve its influence in the
    region. Moldova has been trying to exit the zone of Russia's
    influence. Initially elected on a pro-Russian platform, Moldova's
    incumbent president Vladimir Voronin has been actively trying to
    anchor this tiny republic to the EU and get the Western powers
    involved in mediation of the conflict.

    Voronin's tactics resemble those of Georgian President Mikhail
    Saakashvili. This US-educated lawyer has also been trying to win
    Western mediation of Georgia's conflicts with separatist Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia, while criticizing Russia's conduct as a mediator and
    peacekeeper.

    On Wednesday, the Georgian government fired yet another critical
    salvo over what it deemed as the illegal entry of Russian
    peacekeepers into Georgian territory because the servicemen failed to
    obtain Georgian visas. Some 500 Russian soldiers were deployed to
    South Ossetia from Russia as part of personnel rotation of the
    peacekeeping operation there.

    Given lack of visas, "this operation is no longer peacekeeping, but
    rather an operation of force conducted by the Russian military",
    Georgia's Conflict Resolution Minister Georgi Khaindrava told
    journalists in Tbilisi Thursday.

    Russia's Foreign Ministry blistered at the accusations, noting that
    Georgia did not control the territory of South Ossetia and hinting
    that South Ossetia's aspirations to secede from Georgia may be viewed
    as legitimate by Russia.

    "We treat the principle of territorial integrity with respect. So far
    as Georgia is concerned, however, its territorial integrity is rather
    a possibility, than the present-day political and legal reality," the
    ministry's chief spokesman Mikhail Kamynin said in a Thursday
    statement.

    "It could become a reality only as a result of difficult talks, in
    which the stand of South Ossetia will be based, as we understand it,
    on another principle, which is equally recognized by the world
    community - the right to self-determination," the statement said.

    While commenting on the right of self-determination of South Ossetia
    and Transdniester, Russian diplomats have remained silent on whether
    the separatist republics of Abkhazia and Nagorno-Karabakh should have
    the same right. However, Russia may introduce a resolution to the UN
    Security Council, which would make no reference to Georgia's
    territorial integrity and allow for the possibility of Abkhazia'
    secession, the Friday issue of Kommersant quoted an unnamed source in
    the Russian Foreign Ministry as saying.

    Previously, the official position of Russia, which has been involved
    in mediation of both conflicts and has peacekeepers stationed there,
    has been that it respects the territorial integrity of both Georgia
    and Moldova, but stands for the peaceful resolution of both conflicts
    on the basis of mutual compromises. In reality, Russia offered not so
    tacit support for Transdniester, South Ossetia, and Abkhazia by
    granting Russian citizenship to tens of thousands of residents in the
    separatist provinces. Yet Russian diplomats still pay lip service to
    the idea of territorial integrity. With the conflicts frozen and
    unresolved, Russia can count on maintaining its leverage over all the
    stakeholders.

    But that "frozen" strategy has been increasingly undermined as the
    new governments of Georgia and Moldova seek to anchor themselves to
    the West and the latter reciprocates by boosting its support for the
    two governments vis-à-vis the separatist regimes.

    Sensing the increasing pressure, both Russia and the separatist
    regimes are digging their heels in. The efforts of the separatists to
    legitimize their cause may see a major boost from the pending
    referendum on Kosovo's independence, as well as a recent referendum
    in Montenegro in which voters chose to split from the state union
    with Serbia.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin launched the debate on the issue in
    Russia and neighboring states by pointing out at a press conference
    in late January that Kosovo's independence would bolster similar bids
    by de facto independent republics in the former Soviet Union. He
    returned to the issue of self-determination referendums on Friday by
    citing the 21 May plebiscite in Montenegro.

    "Such precedents would negatively affect the situation not only in
    South Ossetia and Abkhazia, whose people would ask why the Albanians
    in Kosovo could separate from a state they are part of, while they
    cannot," Putin told a meeting of foreign editors and reporters
    outside Moscow.

    While Russian diplomats' reference to the right of self-determination
    may signal a rhetoric shift, it is unlikely that Moscow would
    recognize the independence of either separatist provinces anytime
    soon, according to Aleksei Malashenko, senior expert with the
    Carnegie Moscow Center, and Nikolai Silaev, a senior expert with the
    Center for Caucasus Studies at the Moscow State University of Foreign
    Relations.

    In separate telephone interviews with ISN Security Watch on Thursday,
    both said Russia was interested in keeping the conflicts on the
    territory of former Soviet Union frozen, with Malashenko noting that
    Moscow would hardly alter its position anytime before 2008
    presidential elections.

    Arthur Martirosyan, a senior program manager with the Cambridge,
    MA-based Conflict Management Group, agreed.

    "I do not see this as a major shift in the Russian policy, as Russia
    has been consistently using these conflicts as a persuasion tool
    trying to get Georgia and Moldova and less so Azerbaijan take a less
    pro-Western and a more pro-Russian foreign policy stance," he said.

    Russia is likely to stick to no recognition for as long as there is
    none for Kosovo, according to Martirosyan. However, since Kosovo's
    conditional independence is inevitable, the real question is about
    the timing of Russia's symmetric responses in conflicts in Georgia
    and Moldova, he said in a Friday telephone interview.

    However, according to Konstantin Zatulin, State Duma deputy and head
    of the hard-line Institute of Commonwealth of Independent States
    (CIS) in Moscow, the statements by Foreign Ministry officials do
    imply that Russia will recognize the separatist republics if their
    populations vote to secede.

    "It is very a correct and timely statement, especially after the
    referendum in Montenegro. We need to respect opinion of people who
    want self-determination," he said.

    Zatulin was echoed by Vadim Gustov, chairman of the Federation
    Council's CIS committee. Gustov told Kommersant on Thursday that
    Russia had every right to accept the separatist provinces if they
    voted to join the Russian Federation.

    In addition to these federal legislators, Gennady Bukaev, assistant
    to Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov, claimed at a joint session of
    government of South Ossetia and Russia's North Ossetia in April that
    the federal government had made a principle decision to incorporate
    the former.

    The two republics will then be united into one subject of the Russian
    Federation, "the name of which is already known to the world -
    Alania", two Russian dailies quoted Bukaev as saying. The Russian
    Foreign Ministry later sought to downplay this statement in what
    demonstrates that Russia has no plans to absorb either territory,
    according to independent experts.


    Simon Saradzhyan is a veteran security and defense writer based in
    Moscow, Russia. He is a co-founder of the Eurasian Security Studies
    Center in Moscow.

    http://www.isn.ethz.ch/news/sw/details.cf m?id=16087
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