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    WPS AGENCY, RUSSIA
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    August 13, 2008 Wednesday



    SOUTH WITH ELEMENTS OF NORTH

    by Ivan Sukhov

    CRISIS IN THE CAUCASUS COMPROMISES STABILITY OF THE RUSSIAN REPUBLICS
    IN THE REGION; Conflict in South Ossetia threatens to disrupt
    stability of the Russian Caucasus.


    The Caucasus Range whose peoples President Dmitry Medvedev guaranteed
    security this Monday forms the Russian state border on the territory
    between the Black and Caspian seas. It was different, once.

    At first, the Caucasus was a colossal "white spot" between the Russian
    domains in Georgia and its environs on the one hand and Russian
    fortresses on the Terek and in Kuban on the other. Following that, it
    was part of the Russian Empire. Political-administrative geography of
    the USSR in the region owes its existence to the outcome of WWI that
    gave life to Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan within the frontiers
    resembling the existing ones.

    The Soviet Union disintegrated in 1991, when it was already clear that
    the political-administrative division the Caucasus owed to the
    Bolsheviks (and the one recognized by the international community, for
    that matter) included several ethnic "landmines". Some of them went
    off in the late 1980s. In the first half of the 1990s therefore,
    Armenia found itself at war with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh.
    Russia in its turn backed two self-proclaimed formations on its
    borders (South Ossetia and Abkhazia) at the cost of relations with
    Georgia.

    This support of the self-proclaimed republics was dictated by the
    necessity to stop the bloodshed in conflict areas and, no less
    importantly, prevent the lack of stability from spreading into the
    Russian part of the Caucasus. It turned out all of a sudden that the
    borders prevented contacts between peoples but never served as an
    impenetrable barrier for weapons, gunmen, and separatist ideas. Russia
    and Georgia put the Abkhazian and South Ossetian conflicts on hold and
    left them for later, for when they themselves would be stronger and
    hopefully capable of settling the matter.

    Accomplished through blood and efforts by the middle of Vladimir
    Putin's second presidency, relative stabilization in the Caucasus
    became one of the factors that convinced Russia of its strength in the
    region. Chechnya was finally pacified sufficiently to take its place
    among other Federation subjects. By 2003-2005, it ceased being the
    locomotive force generating lack of stability in the region and
    beyond. The Kremlin replaced leaders in some other, less potentially
    volatile republics. It sparked there the hope that the population
    would be spared life under the semi-independent regimes selling their
    loyalty to Moscow in return for subsidies. Moreover, the general level
    of prosperity increased some.

    The only catch is, all these successes and accomplishments are
    fictitious. Pacification of Chechnya only demonstrated inability of
    the federal center to accomplish elementary military objectives on a
    limited territory through deployment of its own regular army and
    police force and without help from the local elites who only feign
    obedience and loyalty to Russia. These elites established in the
    republic the regime of practically complete internal freedom from
    elementary demands of the federal legislation. They rely on their own
    security structures staffed with former gunmen.

    In fact, Moscow's control over Chechnya was gauged for a long period
    by Putin's control over Ramzan Kadyrov. There was a period when
    charismatic Kadyrov did gain popularity and was in the position to
    become a leader of the whole Caucasus. Shortcomings of this project
    became apparent this May. It seems that Kadyrov's personal popularity
    increases no longer because all of Chechnya feels his insecurity.
    Indeed, who is going to become the lord-protector of Chechnya now that
    Russia has a new president? Other Chechens - wealthy and powerful -
    began going to Moscow assuring it of their loyalty and castigating
    Project Kadyrov as faulty. Chechen youths in the meantime join the
    resistance so that Russian convoys in Chechnya are no longer
    safe. Kadyrov is not to be blamed of course. The blame rests with the
    system forced on the regions when gubernatorial elections were
    abolished. After all, personal loyalty stipulates that a new suzerain
    may (and probably will) have new vassals.

    These tectonic shifts in the regional elites are not restricted to
    Chechnya alone. They are noticed in other Russian regions. In the
    Caucasus, however, they are somewhat unique because - unfortunately -
    these elites are undeniably connected with the underworld. Paradoxical
    as it may appear, but the local authorities are both the enemy and
    sponsor of the gunmen fighting under the green Islamic flag. Some are
    paying gunmen just to be left alone, others to remove an adversary. It
    is hardly surprising therefore that a crime wave is reported to be
    hitting all of the Russian Caucasus again. The governors (presidents,
    whoever) appointed by Moscow never elbowed local crooks out but did
    waste away a great deal of the population's trust. Turf fighting and
    power struggle are only to be expected as a result.

    To a certain extent, local power struggle is one of the elements of
    the crisis in South Ossetia. This republic has never been a Russian
    region, but it has adopted a great deal of aspects of the political
    systems existing in the Russian republics nearby. Creature of Russian
    security structures, President Eduard Kokoity couldn't help wondering
    what the new arrangement of forces in Moscow would have on his own
    lobbyist capacities. Just like some of his counterparts across the
    mountains.

    Sociologists in the meantime emphasize that more and more young men
    from good families, once who received proper education, are joining
    the regional jihad currently split into all sorts of petty splinter
    groups and movements. They are not illiterate and impoverished
    peasants anymore, which means that better prosperity alone does not
    impede proliferation of radical Islam.

    Last but not the least, there are certain channels by which the crisis
    may spread from South Ossetia to the Russian Caucasus. South Ossetian
    refugees in North Ossetia create pressure on the Ossetian-Ingushetian
    conflict area where consequences of the bloody clashes in 1992 are
    only proclaimed resolved and settled. Ingushetia is still convinced
    that literally thousands were ousted from their homes in ethnic purges
    in 1992. Even if refugees from South Ossetia are not as numerous as
    the North Ossetians claim, their appearance in North Ossetia will
    inevitably mount ethnic tension already elevated by the tragedy in
    Beslan.

    Source: Vremya Novostei, August 12, 2008, p. 4

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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