Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 27 – The Russian
military authorities say they will draft 1335 Daghestanis during the fall
campaign, twice as many as during the spring cycle and seven times as many
during the fall of 2012 but far fewer than Makhachkala had sought and far fewer
than the number of Daghestanis in the prime draft-age cohort would require.
According the
officials at the military commissariat in that North Caucasus republic, the
first group of new draftees will depart for the Far East on November 14. A week
later, a second group of 149 will follow them. Intriguingly, 60 percent of the
draftees from Daghestan have higher educations (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/234129/ and sobkorr.ru/news/52949139388DD.html).
Beginning several years ago, the Russian
military reportedly decided not to draft young men from the North Caucasus
because of what commanders perceived was the likelihood that they would clash
with Slavic soldiers. Moscow denied that this was official policy, but since
2011, it has drafted very few Daghestanis: it took only 179 last fall.
(According to media reports,
Daghestani draftees have been involved in such clashes at least five times in
recent years: in the Kuriles in August 2006, in the Altay in 2009, in
Kaliningrad in 2009, in Saratov in 2011, and in Ekaterinburg in 2012.)
Faced with a large number of
draft-age males many of whom are unemployed, the Daghestani government had
pressed to increase the total to as many as 5,000 a year lest the men join the
ranks of anti-regime militants and a figure that would still mean Moscow was drafting
a smaller share of Dagestanis than of ethnic Russians in predominantly Russian
areas.
In order to secure Moscow’s
agreement to take more Daghestanis into the ranks, Makhachkala had to agree this
year to provide two or three individuals to guarantee the good behavior of the
draftees. Before anyone could perform
that service, he or she had to undergo a background check to make sure there
was no connection to illegal band formations.
By not drafting young men from the North Caucasus, Moscow was effectively saying that it did not view the people of that region as full citizens of the Russian Federation, a position that helped the militants recruit many to their ranks. And it was telling Russians they would have to serve at disproportionately higher rates to compensate, something many of them did not like.
Moscow has decided that these are more serious problems than the likelihood that growing xenophobia about ethnic Russians in the ranks will guarantee more conflicts among the soldierly. But the general staff is proceeding very carefully and still taking a smaller share of the draft pool there and then only the most educated.
No comments:
Post a Comment