Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 6 – Despite the
widespread belief in Russia and the West that Moscow is “a stabilizing factor”
in the North Caucasus, an Israeli expert says, Moscow’s policies are in fact destabilizing
the situation there and contributing to the rapidly approaching end of Russian
rule over the region.
In an analysis posted this week on
APN.ru, Avraam Shmulyevich, one of the most thoughtful commentators on developments
in the North Caucasus, argues that the depth of
Russia’s problems in that region is reflected in its decision to launch
a new PR effort there rather than to try to come up with new policies (apn.ru/publications/article29992.htm).
Last week, Russian officials announced
the creation of a new Center for Contemporary Caucasian Policy, yet another channel
like Sochi and the tourism industry for corruption, to try to improve the image
of the region in Russian and foreign media, an effort that Shmulyevich says
almost certainly won’t work.
“The Russian authorities are
desperate,” he continues, because instead of worrying about imagery by itself,
they should be adopting policies that would make themselves look better,
creating a corruption-free judicial system, an effective administrative
structure, and political arrangements that would reflect the interests of the population
rather than corrupt elites.
The Kremlin “cannot do this by
definition,” the Israeli analyst says. “The Russian power vertical is
absolutely ineffective and is capable only of giving rise to new problems. As a
result, “Russia is not in a position to hold on to the Caucasus and in a very
short time will be forced leave from there.”
The reason for that perhaps
unsettling conclusion, Shmulyevich says, is that “in the post-Soviet period,
the North Caucasus has been converted into a colony,” toward which unlike in
Soviet times, Moscow has not promoted any schemes of integration. As a result, Russia’s control of this colony
will end just as the colonies of other metropoles have.
As many forget, a colony “is not
always a region out of which the metropolitan center extracts resources.” Often
the center has to pay. Instead, “a colony is a territory sharply differentiated
from the metropolitan center by national and (or) religious composition of the population
which belongs to a different control, is politically administered from the
center and is economically dependent on it.”
Today, “only one thing” is holding
the North Caucasus back from leaving Russia: “the lack of alternatives.” The West and many in Russia assume that “if
Russia leaves from the North Caucasus, a bloody civil war will begin or Islamists
of the Taliban variety will come to power,” neither of which is a desirable
outcome.
Indeed, “today Russia has an
indulgence from the West for any actions in the Caucasus” because it doesn’t “see”
any alternative to Russian force there.
But that view reflects a failure to understand the situation: Russia
lacks any nationality policy, its approach reflects only “inertia and reaction,”
and its actions are creating more problems than they are solving.
If that doesn’t change, then Russia
will leave the Caucasus and quite soon, regardless of what the Kremlin or
anyone else wants. That outcome is “inevitable” because “when an individual
commits suicide, he dies. The Russian authorities today in the Caucasus are
committing suicide.”
The North Caucasus has been degraded
by Russian actions. It wasn’t always a region that needed outside investment.
It wasn’t always a place where partisan war under religious banners occurred.
And it wasn’t always a place where many live under shariat law. All that happened, Shmulyevich says, because
Moscow adopted such mistaken policies.
Those
policies have filled the pockets of Moscow bureaucrats and local elites, but
they have done nothing to address the strategic challenges the North Caucasus
represents. Russia has been a much less effective colonial power than England
or France: they lost their empires, and so Moscow will lose its.
It is time, he says, for the West to
recognize that “all the destructive processes” in that region are “the result of
attempts by Moscow” to resolve them, that Moscow is not a stabilizing force, and
that the rise of aggressive Islamism in the region is the result of Moscow’s
policies not something Moscow is effectively fighting against.
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