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Heydar Jemal: Kremlin Directly Supports Unrecognized Regime Of Nagor

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  • Heydar Jemal: Kremlin Directly Supports Unrecognized Regime Of Nagor

    HEYDAR JEMAL: KREMLIN DIRECTLY SUPPORTS UNRECOGNIZED REGIME OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH

    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    April 23, 2008 Wednesday

    AN INTERVIEW WITH RUSSIAN ISLAMIC COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN HEYDAR JEMAL;
    An interview with Russian Islamic Committee Chairman Heydar Jemal.

    Question: The Kremlin ordered the establishment of official relations
    with the de facto authorities of the self-proclaimed republics of
    South Ossetia and Abkhazia. What do you think Moscow is after?

    Heydar Jemal: Russia lacks a considerate and well-balanced policy, you
    know. Actions of the Russian authorities are impulsive. Decision-makers
    in Russia promote their own interests, ones that have little to do
    with national interests. In fact, they are even prepared to give Russia
    bad publicity, internationally speaking, if and when it suits them.

    All of that compromises the Kremlin in the eyes of the international
    community. It is part of a campaign aimed to displace the people in
    charge nowadays and oust them for replacement with these very selfish
    men. This faction is powerful enough to promote this or that action
    in support of Abkhazia and South Ossetia that will collide with the
    Kremlin's previous agreements with Washington and Tbilisi.

    It follows that the Russian authorities lack unity, and this lack of
    unity in its turn makes their actions erratic and impulsive. Impossible
    to predict, actually.

    Question: How far do you think Moscow may go in its "games" with
    non-recognized post-Soviet formations?

    Heydar Jemal: Moscow may actually recognize the separatist
    regimes. Infighting in the upper echelons of state power in Moscow
    makes it quite possible. Promoting their own interests, these claims
    may well drag the Kremlin into an armed confrontation with Georgia.

    Question: Analysts claim that Moscow is doing all of that to prevent
    Georgia from becoming a NATO member...

    Heydar Jemal: This explanation is expected to work with a certain
    part of the political establishment, experts, and so on. It is clear
    after all that an armed confrontation with Georgia will put Russia in
    a thoroughly bad light. From the foreign political standpoint, that
    is. As for Georgia's membership in the Alliance, it will certainly
    result in the appearance of NATO and US troops on the Russian borders.

    Question: It is common knowledge that Russian-Azerbaijani relations
    leave much to be desired at this point. Like Georgia, Azerbaijan has a
    territorial problem, that of Nagorno-Karabakh. Do you think the Kremlin
    will be able one fine day to apply the Georgian scenario to Baku?

    Heydar Jemal: Russia supports Armenia in this conflict. Armenia has
    Russia's political and military support. The faction of the so called
    siloviki in the Kremlin is out to retain its positions. The worse
    the situation on the borders of Russia, the more secure this faction...

    The Kremlin assists the Nagorno-Karabakh regime. It's just that it
    does not recognize it officially.
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