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  • Kosovo Wishes In Caucasus

    KOSOVO WISHES IN CAUCASUS
    By Simon Saradzhyan for ISN Security Watch

    ISN, Switzerland
    International Relations & Security Network
    March 28 2006

    While Washington and its allies in the South Caucasus say Kosovo's
    bid for independence from Serbia is a unique situation, separatist
    republics across the former Soviet Union and their sympathizers
    among Russia's ruling elite are publicly debating how far the Kosovo
    precedent could propel them to independence of their own.

    In late January, Russian President Vladimir Putin launched the debate
    by pointing out at a press conference that independence for Kosovo
    would bolster similar bids of de facto independent republics in the
    former Soviet Union.

    "If someone thinks that Kosovo can be granted full independence as a
    state, then why should the Abkhaz or the South Ossetian peoples not
    also have the right to statehood?" he said, referring to Georgia's
    separatist republics.

    "I am not talking here about how Russia would act. But we know, for
    example, that Turkey recognized the Republic of Northern Cyprus,"
    Putin told the 31 January press conference. "I am not saying that
    Russia would immediately recognize Abkhazia or South Ossetia as
    independent states, but international life knows such precedents. I
    am not saying whether these precedents are a good or a bad thing,
    but in order to act fairly, in the interests of all people living
    on this or that territory, we need generally accepted, universal
    principles for resolving these problems."

    The following weeks saw officials from the separatist governments
    of Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia, and Nagorno-Karabakh,
    an Armenian-majority enclave that fought a war to win de facto
    independence from Azerbaijan, hold up the Kosovo situation as a future
    precedent. At the same time, senior officials from Georgia, Moldova,
    and Azerbaijan challenged the argument.

    Giorgi Khaindrava, Georgia's minister for conflict resolution, said
    Putin's statement was not at all surprising, given Moscow's "unilateral
    support" for Abkhazia and South Ossetia. "Kosovo model is not an
    universal one," said Georgian Foreign Minister Gela Bezhuashvili.

    Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov, echoed those
    sentiments, agreeing that Kosovo was a unique situation and should
    not set any precedents for the future.

    US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Rosemary DiCarlo also weighed
    in on the debate, telling the Russian daily newspaper Kommersant
    that a unique situation had arisen in Kosovo because of the violent
    break-up of the former Yugoslavia.

    According to independent experts, claims that independence for Kosovo
    would not have a ripple effect through the former Soviet Union were
    wishful thinking, at best.

    And while the case of Transdniestria looks weak, given the lack of a
    dominant ethnic group, South Ossetians, Abkhazians, and Armenians in
    Nagorno-Karabakh are nurturing hopes that a vote for independence in
    Kosovo could be replicated in their de facto independent republics,
    leading to subsequent recognition of their states by the international
    community.

    Monica Duffy Toft, professor of public policy at the Kennedy School
    of Government and an expert on ethnic conflicts in the former
    Soviet Union, said it would be difficult for proponents of Kosovo's
    uniqueness to come up with sufficient parameters to make their case
    that is disparate from conflicts in former Soviet Union.

    "How many parameters can one list to make their case unique. Is Kosovo
    all that unique - I don't think so," she told ISN Security Watch.

    "In spite of the [fact that the] American argument that Kosovo is a
    disparate when compared to conflicts in former Soviet Union is not
    convincing, the Kosovo referendum will open the floodgates, it will be
    a wake-up call that the principle of territorial integrity is no longer
    absolute in the trade-off with the right to self-determination," Alexei
    Malashenko of the Carnegie Moscow Center told ISN Security Watch.

    Both Toft and Malashenko agreed that independence for Kosovo would
    set a precedent that the separatist regimes of South Ossetia,
    Abkhazian, and Nagorno-Karabakh would rely on to strengthen their
    own independence bids.

    And the Russian leadership reportedly is already trying out the
    precedent with Georgia's separatist South Ossetia.

    Gennady Bukaev, assistant to Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov,
    told a joint session of government of South Ossetia and Russia's North
    Ossetia last week that the federal government had made a principle
    decision to incorporate the former into the Russian Federation. 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 attending officials from North and South Ossetia received Bukaev's
    report enthusiastically, interjecting several times throughout with
    applause, Madina Dzhanaeva, a reporter with Russia's state-owned
    Itar-Tass news agency who was present at the Wednesday sitting in
    the North Ossetian capital of Vladikavkaz, told Vedomosti newspaper.

    Hours after Bukaev's statement was reported in the Russian press,
    Russia's Foreign Ministry issued a statement asserting that Moscow
    had no plans to incorporate South Ossetia even if the separatist
    province held another referendum to breakaway from Georgia.

    Ministry spokesman Mikhail Kamynin said the following day that Russia's
    position was that South Ossetia's status should be determined within
    the existing Joint Control Commission framework, which includes the
    separatist province, Russia, and Georgia.

    According to Kamynin, Bukaev said nothing about any pending
    incorporation of South Ossetia, but was rather referring to the need
    to establish and develop common economic space in North Ossetia,
    South Ossetia, and Georgia's Gori district to revive the local
    economies and facilitate the return of refugees in line with a 2000
    Russian-Georgian agreement.

    The Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on its website that
    Bukaev's Wednesday speech had been misinterpreted and he would brief
    the Joint Control Commission on what he said at a session this week.

    However, the Foreign Ministry's attempt to contain the news was
    unsuccessful, as both government officials and experts picked up the
    issue and began debating whether South Ossetia would become a part
    of Russia de jure.

    According to North Ossetia's president, Taimuraz Mansurov, the
    unification of North and South Ossetias is "inevitable". "When and
    how it will happen is a different issue," Mansurov told Interfax
    last Thursday.

    Sergei Mironov, the speaker of the Federation Council, Russia's upper
    house of parliament, was only a bit more diplomatic when asked to
    comment on prospects of North Ossetia and South Ossetia. Whether
    South Ossetia would become part of Russia would depend on Kosovo's
    final status, he told Interfax.

    "We are closely watching what is happening in Kosovo. The situation
    there is very similar to South Ossetia and they are heading towards
    establishment of an independent state," Mironov said. "The peoples of
    North Ossetia and South Ossetia are one people, even it is divided,
    and as history shows such people unify in the final run," he added.

    South Ossetia fought and won a bloody war to achieve de facto
    independence from Georgia in 1992. Since then, the separatist republic
    has been relying on Russia for economic ties while also periodically
    calling on Moscow to incorporate their province in Russia.

    South Ossetian leader Eduard Kokoity made the latest of attempts last
    Wednesday by telling the joint session of North and South Ossetian
    governments that he would ask the Russian Constitutional Court to
    look into whether his province could be "re-integrated" into Russia.

    He cited the 1774 treaty of Kuchuk Kainarji between Russia and the
    Ottoman Empire that made South Ossetia part of Russia, claiming that
    no treaty afterwards was made to transfer the province to Georgia.

    Both Georgia and the US blasted Kokoity. Julie Finley, US ambassador
    to the Vienna-based Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe (OSCE), said the US reconfirmed "our unequivocal support for
    the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Georgia and the peaceful
    resolution of both the South Ossetia and Abkhazia conflicts based on
    that principle", according to the Associated Press.

    Giorgi Khaindrava, Georgia's minister for conflict resolution, also
    attacked on Thursday Bukaev's statement, calling it "absolutely
    irresponsible" and urging the Russian government to condemn it.

    Moscow officially maintains that it honors Georgia's territorial
    integrity and maintains a peacekeeping force in the separatist
    republic, but Tbilisi has accused Moscow of supporting South Ossetian
    separatists through trade, economic aide, and citizenship.

    As of 2003, there were 70,000 people residing in South Ossetia, of
    which 67 per cent were ethnic Ossetian and 25 per cent were ethnic
    Georgians, according to Izvestia. Ninety-five per cent of residents
    of South Ossetia hold Russian passports in what Georgian officials
    said reflect Russia's tacit support for independence. Similarly,
    a majority of residents in Abkhazia and a sizeable part of the
    population of Transdniestria also hold Russian passports.

    Both Malashenko and Mikhail Roshchin, Caucasus expert at the Institute
    of Oriental Studies in Moscow, expressed doubts that Russia had
    any imminent plans to incorporate South Ossetia, saying Bukaev's
    statement could be a trial balloon. "They might be probing to see
    what the reaction is," Roshchin said.

    However, even such a trial balloon should not have been allowed, if
    Russia were indeed interested in absorbing South Ossetia, Malashenko
    said, adding that Moscow should have left the issue alone until a
    decision on Kosovo was made.

    Nikolai Silaev of the Center for Caucasus Studies at the Moscow State
    University of Foreign Relations also believes it could have been
    a trial balloon and questioned the wisdom of incorporating South
    Ossetia. He said the economically depressed region would become
    another burden for the federal budget and that unification of the
    two Ossetias might fuel Ossetian nationalism.

    Silaev said Russia would rather benefit if Georgia formed a
    confederation state with breakaway provinces of Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia, which would be anchored to Russia.

    Toft also questioned the viability of Russia setting its sights on
    South Ossetia, by noting that it would be preceded by a referendum of
    independence and then subsequent recognition of the international
    community in what could bode ill for Russia itself, given that
    republics in the North Caucasus, dominated by one or two ethnic groups,
    could follow the lead.

    Simon Saradzhyan is a veteran security and defense reporter 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=15265
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