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  • Kosovan Independence Could Ignite New Conflicts In Territories Of Fo

    KOSOVAN INDEPENDENCE COULD IGNITE NEW CONFLICTS IN TERRITORIES OF FORMER SOVIET UNION
    By Vladimir Volkov

    World Socialist Web Site, MI
    Feb 29 2008

    Kosovo's February 17 declaration of independence, which was supported
    by the US and Western European countries such as Germany, France,
    Great Britain and Italy, threatens to inflame relations between former
    constituent nations of the Soviet Union.

    A number of frozen conflicts from the 1990s-Abkhazia and Southern
    Ossetia in Georgia, Pridnestrovie in Moldova, Nagorno-Karabakh in
    Azerbaijan-could once again ignite, resulting in military action with
    unforeseen consequences.

    At the same time, Kosovo's independence cuts across the intended
    scenario of the transfer of power in the Kremlin to President Vladimir
    Putin's successor, Dmitry Medvedev. One of the essential elements of
    this transfer has been a relaxation of tensions with the West, against
    the background of Russia's growing role in international relations.

    By condemning the separation of Kosovo from Serbia, Kremlin politicians
    have sharply narrowed the possibility of friendly gestures toward the
    West. One can assume their speeches will be dominated by nationalistic
    and militaristic rhetoric, proceeding from Putin's February 2007
    Munich speech, disappointing Russian liberals who had hoped for a
    thaw in Russian-Western relations.

    On February 18, the day after Kosovo's declaration of independence,
    the State Duma and Council of the Russian Federation passed a joint
    resolution stating that "the norms of international law have been
    trampled," and that "in fact, all the principles of the UN have been
    fully overturned."

    Commenting on this statement, Sergei Mironov, the speaker of the
    Federation Council, added that Russia was obliged to review its
    attitude toward the unrecognized territories that declared independence
    following the fall of the Soviet Union, hinting that they might be
    officially recognized by Moscow.

    The next wave of declarations from Russia came on February 22, after
    a rally the previous evening by 200,000 people in Belgrade ended with
    attacks on the American embassy.

    Dmitry Rogozin, Russia's permanent representative to NATO, declared
    that "Russia does not exclude the possibility of intervening militarily
    in the region, if the actions of the European Union or NATO violate
    the resolution of the UN's Security Council on Kosovo."

    In addition, Rogozin suggested that the process of recognizing Kosovo's
    independence was financed by the local narco-mafia. These words evoked
    an official rebuke from Washington.

    Russian President Putin also addressed the issue, choosing as a forum
    an informal summit of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)
    in Moscow, where, for the first time in recent years, the presidents
    of all twelve states of the Commonwealth have gathered. (This meeting
    included all the former republics of the USSR except for the Baltic
    countries. Press statements paid particular attention to the arrival
    in Moscow of Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko, Georgian President
    Mikhail Saakashvili and Turkmen president Gurbangula Berdymukhammedov).

    At the meeting, Putin said: "The Kosovo precedent is a bad precedent.

    In essence, it breaks the entire system of international relations
    which has developed, not over decades, but over centuries. And,
    without any doubt, it can draw in its wake a chain of unpredictable
    consequences."

    Putin added that the states that have recognized Kosovo's independence
    from Serbia have not considered the implications of their actions. "In
    the final analysis," he said, "this is a double-edged sword, which
    may come back to haunt them at some point."

    Despite the legal justification for the objections of Russian leaders
    to the West's actions, Russia's position is deeply hypocritical.

    Over the past several years, official Russian propaganda focused on
    criticizing conceptions of human rights and democratic freedoms.

    These have been declared the offspring of Western civilization and
    not applicable to Russia.

    Kremlin propagandists have been advancing the ideas of imperial
    greatness and enlightened authoritarianism ("sovereign democracy").

    In practice, this is expressed in the suppression of any opposition,
    the wide-scale falsification of elections, and measures to limit
    civil and political rights.

    The very manner in which supreme power in the Kremlin is being
    transferred from Putin to Medvedev ignores elementary democratic
    procedures. The "successor" designated by Putin is elevated above
    all other nominal candidates for president.

    In foreign policy, the Kremlin has added to its arsenal the notion
    of an "energy empire," whereby Moscow's needs are satisfied by means
    of economic pressure and blackmail. The gas disputes with Ukraine
    illustrate the real, rather than professed, methods and outlook of
    the Russian ruling elite.

    Within this framework, the Kremlin's defense of the rights of
    unrecognized autonomous regions in the territories of Georgia, Moldova
    and Azerbaijan is based exclusively on the desire to maintain its
    own geopolitical interests. Moscow views the issue of the status and
    fate of these autonomous areas as small change in its dealings with
    neighboring states.

    Under pressure from Russia, Abkhazia and South Ossetia-autonomous
    areas in which more than 80 percent of the populations have Russian
    passports-have not made any specific announcements about declaring
    their own independence in the wake of the Kosovo precedent. Instead,
    at the beginning of last week, the presidents of both autonomous areas
    expressed their intention in the near future to appeal to Russia,
    other countries of the CIS and the UN with a request to recognize
    their independence.

    Speaking at a press conference in the Russian capital, the president
    of Abkhazia, Sergei Bagapsh, said Kosovo established a precedent and
    that one "cannot speak of the unique nature of Kosovo's case." The
    president of South Ossetia, Eduard Kokoity, insisted that South Ossetia
    and Abkhazia had stronger political and legal grounds to have their
    independence recognized than Kosovo. He noted that the two regions
    of Georgia declared their independence 17 years ago.

    A number of experts have expressed doubts that Russia will decide
    to recognize the independence of these two autonomous areas. Izolda
    Kachmazova, the director of the Institute of Political Technologies in
    South Ossetia, told the correspondent of Gazette: "Even if the entire
    world recognizes Kosovo, Russia will not support us. We are merely
    small change in her hands for pressuring Georgia and the international
    community. When Tbilisi conducts negotiations with NATO, Russia will
    try through various political forces to restrain her from entering the
    Northern Atlantic alliance, promising, in exchange, us and Abkhazia."

    "I do not think that Moscow will recognize the independence of Abkhazia
    and South Ossetia," said the deputy director of the Moscow Center
    for Political Research, Aleksei Makarin. "In that case, Russia's
    presence in international organizations would come into question. I
    think Moscow will simply strengthen some of its economic and cultural
    aid to these republics and leave it at that."

    Georgia was one of the countries of the CIS that refused to recognize
    Kosovo's independence. The chairman of the Georgian parliamentary
    committee on foreign affairs, Konstantin Gabashvili, confirmed the
    position of his government on Kosovo, adding: "But this issue might be
    revisited if Russia, by resorting to precedent, takes definite steps
    to recognize the independence of separatist enclaves in Abkhazia,
    South Ossetia and Pridnestrovie."

    After Saakashvili was re-elected president on 5 January of this
    year, the rhetoric of the Georgian leaders aimed at Russia softened
    significantly. Tbilisi began to speak of the irreversibility of
    cooperation with Moscow, of the need to relax visa requirements,
    of removing the wine embargo and of removing transport restrictions.

    Russian demands toward Georgia were formulated by the head of the
    CIS countries within the Russian Foreign Ministry, Andrei Kelin. He
    told the newspaper Kommersant that "there is a set of concrete steps
    by which Georgia must show its readiness to normalize its relations
    with us." Among these conditions: Georgian withdrawal of objections
    it filed with the World Trade Organization, the opening of a Russian
    school in Tbilisi, and, most importantly, legislation barring foreign
    military bases on Georgian territory.

    Kelin said, "Our bases were removed from Georgia precisely on such
    promises, which have yet to be fulfilled. In the context of Georgia's
    intention to enter NATO, therefore, it is extremely important to us
    that Georgia adopt a law about not admitting foreign troops."

    Moscow has adopted a no less pragmatic position with regard to
    Pridnestrovie. Russia is prepared to make significant concessions on
    the status of this territory and conclude the issue of its independence
    in return for preferential treatment in economic relations with
    Moldova and Moldovan support on the question of Kosovo.

    Last week, Moldovan Prime Minister Vasilii Tarpaev visited Moscow. At a
    meeting with him the Russian premier, Viktor Zubkov, stated: "Russia
    supports the territorial integrity of Moldova, on whose territory
    the Pridnestrovie question has not been settled."

    At the meeting of the two premiers, agreement was reached that the
    Russian energy giant Gazprom would take part in exploration of Moldovan
    natural gas sites. Gazprom already has a 50 percent-plus-one share
    control of the company Moldovagaz and intends to increase its share to
    80 percent. It is not excluded that the desired shares will be received
    in exchange for debt. At the present time, the debt of Kishinev and
    Tiraspol for gas supplied by Russia has reached almost $2 billion.

    Since November, Russia has relaxed the economic embargo against Moldova
    that was introduced in the spring of 2006. It had a palpable effect
    on Moldovan wine makers, who traditionally sold most of their product
    in Russia.

    It seems that settlement of the Pridnestrovie problem will be based
    on the formula of 5+2: Moldova, Pridnestrovie, Russia, Ukraine and
    Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe intermediaries,
    plus observers from the United States and the European Union. Out of
    this process is expected to emerge a special status for Pridnestrovie
    that will preserve the sovereignty and territorial integrity of
    Moldova within its internationally recognized boundaries.

    Moldova sharply condemned Kosovo's declaration of independence.

    President Vladimir Voronin said his country "will never recognize
    Kosovo's independence," and official Kishinev circulated a statement
    that called the Kosovo precedent "a destabilizing factor in Europe"
    and "a dangerous stimulus for activating separatist moods in all the
    zones of conflict."

    Other countries of the CIS that spoke out against recognizing Kosovo
    were Azerbaijan, Belorussia, Kirgizia, Tazhikistan and Kazakhstan.

    For the time being Ukraine, Turkmenia and Uzbekestan have taken
    no position.

    Nor has Armenia-clearly under pressure from Moscow-declared its
    position, although voices are being raised in favor of recognizing
    first Kosovo and then Karabakh. But if Armenia, which is highly
    dependent both economically and politically on Russia, made such a
    decision, it would push Azerbaijan away from Moscow, which, in turn,
    would lead to sharp changes in the entire configuration of political
    relations in the Caspian and Caucasian regions. It would also
    influence plans to build oil and gas pipelines, under conditions in
    which projects beneficial to Russia are competing with other projects
    more advantageous to the United States and Europe.

    The silence of Ukraine over Kosovo is also understandable. It is
    facing escalating tensions with Russia over the transport of Russian
    gas to the West, as well as over its plans to enter NATO.

    At a joint press conference in Moscow with Ukrainian President Viktor
    Yushchenko on February 11, Putin issued an open threat about the
    possibility of a missile strike against the territory of Ukraine.

    Putin declared that Russia would not intervene in Ukraine's affairs,
    and that if the latter wanted to limit its sovereignty, that was its
    own business. However, he added, the perspective of NATO military
    bases appearing in Ukraine-for instance, in Sevastopol-would require
    that Russia take adequate countermeasures.

    "It is terrible not only to say, but to even think," said Putin,
    "that Russia would aim its missile systems at Ukraine in response."

    This unconcealed threat says much more about the real character of
    relations in post-Soviet territories than dozens of formal declarations
    of devotion to peace and neighborly relations.

    Inter-state and ethnic wars that erupted on the territories of the
    former USSR in the 1990s cost, according to available data, several
    hundred thousand lives. Millions of people lost their homes or were
    forced to move.

    The consequences of this destructive process have not yet been
    overcome, nor can they be overcome in the framework of the policies
    of capitalist reforms. These policies assign primary importance not
    to the objective needs of the people, nor to the goal of rationally
    organizing the economy in the interests of the majority, but serve
    only the satisfaction of the predatory appetites of the new ruling
    elites which arose as the inheritors of the old Soviet Stalinist
    bureaucracy, and which are parasitically plundering the natural and
    economic resources of their respective countries.

    Each of these ruling cliques tries in isolation to establish direct
    ties to the major powers of world imperialism and the leaders of the
    transnational corporations. They continue to make off with everything
    accumulated over decades of Soviet history, thereby destroying the
    remaining social gains and ruthlessly exploiting the working class
    and other layers of those working in their countries.

    The efforts of the great powers to strengthen their influence on the
    territories of the former USSR, and the striving of Russia to recoup
    some of its lost positions, threaten new and bloody conflicts.

    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/feb2 008/russ-f29.shtml
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