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Crime, Geopolitics And The Black Sea

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  • Crime, Geopolitics And The Black Sea

    CRIME, GEOPOLITICS AND THE BLACK SEA

    Kyiv Post, Ukraine
    Aug 30 2007

    Since antiquity, the Black Sea Region (BSR) has united its littoral
    states and served as a crossroads. It forms an invaluable cultural,
    political and economic sea triangle connecting the nations of the
    West, Greater Middle East and Eurasia. The dissolution of the Soviet
    Union and the enlargement processes of the North Atlantic Treaty
    Organization and the European Union connect the West to the BSR in
    an unprecedented manner.

    This article presents the Newly Independent States in the Black Sea
    Region (NISBSR) as a security complex and new front for combating
    threats to international security caused by corruption and
    transnational crime.

    Following the collapse of the Soviet Empire, states in the BSR
    inherited a political criminal nexus and a common legacy of a lack of
    respect for the rule of law, absence of civil society, a large criminal
    underworld and shadow economy, endemic corruption and a demoralized
    law enforcement and legal apparatus, satisfying the preconditions for
    the development of a serious and sophisticated organized crime problem.

    Whereas some states have successfully entered the Euro-Atlantic
    integration process, Moscow's influence on the strategic territories
    of its former empire must not be underestimated. Parts of the former
    Soviet nomenklatura have been linked to separatism and transnational
    crime in the BSR. The effects of human trafficking, contraband product
    trade and illegal arms trade have an international butterfly effect
    on human, economic, territorial and financial security.

    Today, the Black Sea's shores host separatist conflicts referred to
    as "criminal black holes." Moscow may not have only backed breakaway
    territories in Moldova (Trans-Dniester) and Georgia (Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia); some claim these separatist sentiments are orchestrated
    and maintained by Moscow's policies.

    Moscow's role in Azerbaijan and Armenia (Nagorno-Karabakh) and
    separatism in Ukraine (Sevastopol, Crimea) should also be considered.

    The criminalization and corruption of the NISBSR impede the state's
    de facto control over its territory and population.

    Russia's armed forces and political-economic companies like [Russia's
    state gas monopoly - Ed. Note] Gazprom increase its power in the NISBSR
    to the detriment of democratic security. To understand separatism in
    the NISBSR, the symbiotic relationship between transnational organized
    crime and Russia's geopolitical interests must be considered.

    Gazprom's character is not only illustrated by its consideration
    to supply illegitimate Trans-Dniester with gas supplies separately
    from Moldova. Western law enforcement and intelligence agencies have
    suspected relations between Gazprom, Russian security services and
    companies linked to [Ukrainian-born - Ed. note] Semyon Mogilevich,
    [an alleged mobster wanted by the FBI on money-laundering and
    racketeering charges - Ed. note].

    A [Ukrainian State Security Service - Ed. Note] SBU spokesperson
    stated: "The probe is part of a broader investigation into suspected
    money-laundering, smuggling and tax evasion stemming from the Turkmen
    gas trade."

    The US Justice Department identified Mogilevich as the leader of
    over 300 criminals, operating in more than 30 countries, involved in
    murder, extortion, trafficking in women for prostitution, smuggling,
    money-laundering, and bank and securities fraud and, in numerous
    countries, the corruption of public officials.

    Regional governmental organizations and experts acknowledge the need
    for a common approach to transnational organized crime. In 1995,
    the Organization of Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC) identified
    transnational crime as a serious threat to the region's economic
    stability and security.

    The 2002 Agreement among the Governments of the BSEC Participating
    States on Cooperation in Combating Crime, particularly in its organized
    forms, targets specific crimes to be prevented, suppressed, detected,
    disclosed and investigated in cooperation.

    In 2005, the Community of Democratic Choice followed suit. It
    identified the need "...to address the threats to the democratic
    development of society, which are - among others - corruption,
    organized crime, money-laundering, terrorism in its different forms,
    the existence of remaining conflicts in Europe and illicit trafficking
    in drugs, arms and human beings."

    In May 2006, heads of state at the GUAM [Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan
    and Moldova Organization for Democracy and Economic Development - Ed.

    Note] Summit paid special attention to the challenges and threats
    of aggressive separatism and transnational organized crime in their
    region.

    Unresolved conflicts and the illegal presence of foreign troops
    and armaments in GUAM States were recognized as main obstacles to
    full-scale democratic transformations and economic development in
    the region.

    Security problems related to transnational crime in the BSR are
    specific in character. Lacking political will, however, it is unlikely
    they will succeed in nipping organized crime in the bud and punishing
    the state and non-state actors involved.

    Transnational organized crime, combined with remnants of communist
    and Soviet networks, can be manipulated to advance the geopolitical
    motives of third states. Frozen conflicts and breakaway territories
    promote organized criminal activity and impede democratic development.

    One may argue that organized crime is as old as humankind, and what
    time does not resolve is not a problem. However, for the rule of law
    and democratic development in the Black Sea Region, it is.

    Lada L. Roslycky LL.M. is an independent consultant and PhD Researcher
    at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands.
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