Eye On Eurasia: Future Of Caucasus

From: MSN NicknameEagle_wng  (Original Message)    Sent: 4/18/2006 7:33 AM

Eye on Eurasia: Future of Caucasus

TALLINN, Estonia — Moscow no longer has any “rational basis” for keeping the non-Russian republics of the Northern Caucasus within the Russian Federation, according to a Moscow commentator, but “neither the Russian government nor Russian public opinion is yet prepared” to allow them to become independent.

That time will come, Boris Sokolov has argued on the prognosis.ru web site, when Russians finally recognize that “the North Caucasus republics have completely lost their strategic importance” and that raising the standard of living there sufficiently to integrate them into Russian society would be prohibitively expensive.

Two hundred years ago, Sokolov notes, controlling the northern Caucasus was a strategic necessity for the Russian Empire. Having gained control of what is now Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, the tsars needed to control the land bridge between Russia proper and these new territories, especially since the Russian fleet was so weak.

And because of the strategic importance of the North Caucasus in this regard, both the tsarist regime and the Soviet one that succeeded it were prepared to use force on a regular basis to put down the revolts by one or another group that have flared up on a regular basis in this most unsettled region.

But Sokolov continues, “with the collapse of the Soviet Union, the geopolitical situation changed completely.” On the one hand, the three countries of the southern Caucasus became independent and Turkey ceased to be “a potential opponent” of Russia. And on the other, Russia is in a position to supply its remaining bases in Armenia by air.

In addition, the republics of the North Caucasus “from an economic point of view” are more a burden than an asset to Moscow: “the reserves of oil there are not great and do not play any role in Russia’s exports, there are few useful natural resources, the land is not that fertile, and agricultural production at best is sufficient only for internal consumption.”

They are all extremely poor, with unemployment rates approaching 70 percent or in some localities even more. In other respects to, these republics “were and remain internal colonies” in precisely the way Lenin defined that term. Moreover, the nominally democratic institutions there are a cover for what in fact are corrupt patron-client relations.

Because of the events of the last 15 years, virtually all Russians have left. Indeed, Sokolov continues, “it is impossible to imagine a Russian who would risk moving there to settle on a permanent basis.” Changing that or the economic situation would require an amount of money “that no Stabilization Fund could have.”

Consequently, just as President Charles de Gaulle decided to grant Algeria independence rather than continue a disastrous war or spend enormous sums in order to keep that North African area under French control, so too, Sokolov insists, some future Russian leader will draw the same conclusion and allow the North Caucasus republics to leave.

But such a decision is unlikely anytime soon. At present, Russians who oppose independence for these republics advance two arguments, he says. First, they point to “the memory of a great empire and hopes for its revival. And second, they suggest that there would be a domino effect elsewhere in the Russian Federation.

The first of these arguments is at best a distant dream, and the second is simply not true, Sokolov says. “Today separatist inclinations behind the borders of the North Caucasus are not to be observed,” noting that the Middle Volga republics are not seeking independence and that others can’t because of size, location, or the dominance of the Russian community.

As a result, he says, “by itself the separation of the North Caucasus republics will not have “a domino effect” elsewhere in the Russian Federation.

What is more important, Sokolov says, is that all of the means Russia has to exert influence on the southern Caucasus “are not connected with Russian control over the North Caucasus republics. The “only thing” Moscow might be concerned about would be the transit of oil and gas, but when independent, these republics would want to help with that.

Despite current opposition to recognizing the independence of these countries, Sokolov argues that eventually Moscow will do so, possibly as a result of a dramatic fall in gas and oil prices will make the burden of retaining them too great. In the meantime, Russia will continue to lose its position there, as the rule of Ramzan Kadyrov in Chechnya shows.

Paul Goble teaches at the EuroCollege of the University of Tartu in Estonia

Source: Wpherald

2006-04-18 13:01:41

http://www.kavkazcenter.net/eng/content/2006/04/18/4609.shtml

Share Button