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Russia's regional allies could fall like dominoes following Kyrgyzup

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  • Russia's regional allies could fall like dominoes following Kyrgyzup

    Russia's regional allies could fall like dominoes following Kyrgyz uprising
    By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

    AP Worldstream
    Mar 26, 2005

    MOSCOW _ The swift overthrow of the man who ruled Kyrgyzstan for 15
    years has turned up the heat on other autocratic rulers across the
    ex-Soviet landscape, threatening to topple many of Russia's closest
    allies like dominoes and chip away inexorably at the Kremlin's
    regional clout.

    This week's overthrow of the government in Kyrgyzstan was the third
    uprising in Russia's sphere of interest in less than two years. Unlike
    Georgia and Ukraine, however, the tussle between the government and
    the opposition had nothing to do with a wider, East-West competition
    for influence in the post-Soviet region.

    Instead, it centered on a heretofore weak and divided opposition
    capitalizing on the deep unpopularity of an increasingly autocratic
    president. Russia has depended on such leaders to promote its strategic
    interests.

    Already, the ripples of revolution have been felt far beyond the small,
    mountainous country in Central Asia. In Belarus, on Russia's western
    edge, police clashed Friday with demonstrators calling for President
    Alexander Lukashenko's resignation.

    "Today's gathering must send a signal to the West, Russia and our own
    bureaucrats that Belarus is ready for a serious change," said Andrei
    Klimov, an opposition leader. "Our aim is to start the Belarusian
    revolution and force the resignation of Lukashenko, the last dictator
    of Europe."

    In tightly controlled Uzbekistan, which borders Kyrgyzstan to the west,
    opposition leaders from various movements issued a joint statement
    expressing admiration for the rapid-fire Bishkek coup.

    "We are sure that the process of democratic reforms that started in
    Kyrgyzstan will highly influence all parts of Central Asia," they said.

    The domino effect would have deep ramifications for Russia.

    Moscow wants desperately to form a free-trade zone that could restore
    some of its Soviet-era economic power, but that requires cooperation
    from Kazakhstan and Belarus. Today, those countries are in safe hands
    from Moscow's point of view, but the opposition forces might not see
    such an alliance in their nations' interest.

    The fourth partner in the proposed project, Ukraine, already has
    suggested it could pull out if new President Viktor Yushchenko's
    government decides it is not in the national interest.

    Moscow needs oil- and gas-rich Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan
    to help maintain its status as a top energy transporter, and Tajikistan
    and Armenia, which both host Russian bases, as outposts for its
    military in Central Asia and the Caucasus.

    New, opposition-led governments in any of those nations could cut
    into Russia's strategic sway.

    After losing its stake in last year's political battle in Ukraine,
    the Kremlin has taken a careful approach to Kyrgyzstan, making no
    visible effort to help keep its longtime leader from losing power.

    "The Kremlin has never recovered from the Ukrainian trauma and
    apparently decided to stay away out of fear that an attempt to
    influence events there will backfire again," Fyodor Lukyanov, the
    editor of Russia in Global Affairs magazine, told The Associated
    Press. "It was simply following the events."

    Under Kyrgyzstan's President Askar Akayev, Bishkek hosted both U.S.
    and Russian military air bases just 30 kilometers (20 miles) away
    one from another _ another reason why neither Moscow nor Washington
    seemed to be overtly backing either side in Kyrgyzstan.

    "No one needs destabilization in Kyrgyzstan. It's a rare case when
    the interests of Moscow and Washington converge," Lukyanov said.

    Gleb Pavlovsky, a leading Russian political strategist linked to
    the Kremlin who took part in Ukraine's election campaign, said that
    Moscow had failed to keep ex-Soviet nations in its orbit because its
    efforts were belated and badly organized.

    "We were late in launching this policy, and we have received a good
    beating," he said during a television talk show.

    Stanislav Belkovsky, another top Russian political analyst with
    reported links to officialdom, said that Russia's passivity in
    Kyrgyzstan had shown that Russia had in fact abandoned its ambitions
    to play a dominant role on the ex-Soviet space.

    "The revolution in Kyrgyzstan has shown that Russia can't and doesn't
    want to control the post-Soviet space," Belkovsky said.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin warned Friday against placing
    excessive hopes in the Commonwealth of Independent States, a loose
    alliance of 12 ex-Soviet nations which Moscow has sought to dominate.
    With surprising candor, Putin said that the CIS was merely a discussion
    forum that couldn't bring forth serious economic cooperation _ what
    he called a forum created for the "civilized divorce" of the former
    Soviet republics, in contrast to the European Union, which was built
    to foster real cooperation.

    "All disappointments come from excessive expectations," Putin said.
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