Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ethnic tensions: War in the Caucasus is Stalin's legacy

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Ethnic tensions: War in the Caucasus is Stalin's legacy

    Independent, UK

    Ethnic tensions: War in the Caucasus is Stalin's legacy

    Arbitrary boundaries and forced repatriation are two of the causes
    behind the constant conflicts in the former Soviet Union. Shaun Walker
    reports

    Sunday, 17 August 2008

    The Georgians are bombing South Ossetia; the Russians have come
    through the Roki tunnel to take Tskhinvali; a second front has been
    launched in the Kodori Gorge; the Russians have occupied Gori, Poti
    and Senaki. It's been a week where names and places that previously
    didn't register a blip on the Western consciousness have suddenly
    become headline news. Even most of the journalists covering the
    conflict, shipped in from big bureaux across the world, had never
    heard of Tskhinvali in the morning when they flew in. By evening they
    were pontificating about the significance of its fall to the Russians
    on live television.


    The most intense stage of conflict is over now in South Ossetia, but
    hopes for a negotiated settlement remain very slim indeed. The real
    bad news, though, is that South Ossetia is not alone as a potential
    hot spot in the former Soviet Union. There are many spots that you may
    never have heard of, dotted all around the territory that was once
    part of the Red Empire.

    As well as South Ossetia, there is Georgia's other breakaway state of
    Abkhazia. Tiny South Ossetia is inconceivable as a "real country", and
    could only be part of either Russia or Georgia, but Abkhazia might
    have a better shot of making it. It has a coastline, which fuels the
    tourist industry that is beginning to revive, and means that trade
    with countries other than Russia is possible.

    Hidden in the lush forest above the coast at Gagra in Abkhazia is a
    lime-green mansion; one of several dachas built for Joseph Stalin, an
    ethnic Georgian, along the Abkhaz coastline. He'd come for weeks in
    the summer, relaxing on the balcony or playing a game of pool with
    other leading Bolsheviks. It may have been here that Stalin made many
    of the decisions that scattered and divided nations, and led to many
    of the conflicts that have flared up since the Soviet Union
    collapsed. National and ethnic identi

    ties were shifted, encouraged or suppressed during different
    periods. Whole nations were deported to Siberia or the Kazakh steppe,
    scattered irrevocably like human dust. Borders between the different
    entities of the union were changed at will, often with the express
    intention of fomenting ethnic unrest.

    In Abkhazia itself, huge numbers of Georgian settlers were moved in;
    the Abkhaz language was suppressed and the Georgian language was
    enforced in schools and universities. In fact, many ethnic Abkhaz talk
    about the Georgian rule over their territory in the same terms that
    the Georgians themselves talk about Soviet oppression.

    While Vladimir Putin and the Kremlin undoubtedly ruthlessly exploit
    the tensions in South Ossetia and Abkhazia, it is a foolish mistake to
    think they created them. Ossetians and Abkhaz remember all too well
    the aggressive and unpleasant Georgian nationalism during the early
    1990s, and have no desire to be part of a Georgian state. Meanwhile,
    after the wars in both regions at that time, many ethnic Georgians
    still live as refugees in grim conditions in Tbilisi and other
    Georgian cities.

    The Abkhaz say that all the West's posturing over "territorial
    integrity" is meaningless ` why on earth should arbitrary lines drawn
    up by Stalin be the basis for statehood in the 21st century? Now that
    Saakashvili has been humiliated over the South Ossetian conflict, the
    Abkhaz are more buoyant than ever, and it's hard to see the territory
    ever becoming part of Georgia again. The threat of conflict will
    always loom, though, and when the Georgians rebuild their army and
    country, we can expect to see renewed conflict.

    Over the other side of the Caucasus Mountains, things are just as
    volatile. We all know about Chechnya, and the bloody wars that Russia
    has fought to bring the region under its control. For now, under the
    iron-fisted rule of former rebel Ramzan Kadyrov, the situation is
    relatively quiet, and ironically the odious Kadyrov has achieved far
    more independence from Moscow than his rebel predecessors could have
    dreamed of. He has built a Chechnya that for all intents and purposes
    is independent from Moscow, and he's done it using Moscow's money.

    Not too far from Chechnya is Prigorodny District, a disputed bit of
    land between Ingushetia and North Ossetia. Stalin had the entire
    Ingush population, along with the Chechens, deported to Kazakhstan
    during the Second World War. By the time they were allowed to return
    in the 1950s, their houses had been taken over by ethnic
    Ossetians. Another small, nasty war in the early 1990s failed to solve
    the problem, and there are still disgruntled Ingush refugees who want
    to return; some of them were involved in the Beslan school siege in
    North Ossetia.

    One of the Kremlin's fears about Georgian actions in South Ossetia was
    a renewed stream of Ossetian refugees crossing the Caucasus Mountains
    and flooding into Prigorodny, setting off more tensions with the
    Ingush and repercussions across the North Caucasus. That's not to say
    that Russia's response was born purely from security concerns, but if
    Britain can feel justified to intervene for strategic reasons in Iraq
    and Afghanistan, it's hardly surprising that the Russians feel they
    can use force on their own doorstep to prevent instability across
    their southern region.

    As well as Abkhazia and South Ossetia, there are two other "breakaway
    states" in the former Soviet Union. There's Nagorno-Karabakh, where a
    war in the early 1990s killed 30,000. The territory is ethnically
    majority Armenian, was part of Azerbaijan in the Soviet period, but is
    now controlled by Armenian separatists. A shaky status quo sees much
    of the territory still in ruins, no diplomatic relations between the
    two countries, and a large chunk of Azerbaijan "proper" occupied by
    Armenia. Malnourished conscripts point rifles at each other from muddy
    trenches along the last genuine front line in Europe.

    Then there's Transdniester, a sliver of land controlled by
    Moscow-loyal separatists but officially part of Moldova. It's run by
    Igor Smirnov, who might make the Guinness World Records for having the
    bushiest eyebrows in the world. His land is a potential conflict zone
    right on the EU's border.

    The list goes on and on. In the Fergana Valley, a three-country zone
    in Central Asia where impoverished Uzbeks, Kyrgyz and Tajiks live,
    Islamic extremism is on the rise and the potential for ethnic conflict
    growing all the time. All the way across the other side of the former
    Soviet Union, the sizeable Russian minority in the Baltic states feels
    oppressed and excluded from their countries' drive towards the EU and
    linguistic nationalism.

    One of Vladimir Putin's most-quoted phrases is that the "collapse of
    the Soviet Union was the greatest geopolitical tragedy of the 21st
    century". This was widely interpreted as being part of the ex-KGB
    agent's hankering for the return of the Soviet past. But Putin spoke
    the words while talking about the vicious wars that raged in its
    aftermath and the wars that are likely to come in the future. The
    week's events in South Ossetia show how quickly simmering tensions can
    erupt into vicious conflict. Look out for more violence in places
    you've never heard of, coming soon
Working...
X