Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 6 – If it weren’t
for the presence of the Crimean Tatar minority on the Crimean peninsula which
is acting as “a restraining factor,” according to a former interior ministry
official there, Crimea would already have become a Ukrainian counterpart to Transdniestria
or Karabakh, a frozen conflict Moscow could use as leverage against Kyiv.
Gennady Moskal, who now serves as a
deputy there, said that he is “certain” of that because despite the attention
they receive, “all the pro-Russian parties” in Ukraine are creatures Yanukovich’s
Party of the Regions intended to intimidate Ukrainians but too weak to matter
as much as many think (gordonua.com/news/politics/Moskal-Esli-by-ne-tatary-my-by-davno-imeli-v-Krymu-svoe-Pridnestrove-ili-Nagornyy-Karabah-8427.html).
The plans of such parties in the
ethnic Russian-dominated parliament in the Crimean Autonomy to appeal to Moscow
to defend them should become the basis of a criminal case against them, Moskal
says. “Crimea is an integral part of
Ukraine.” And he points out that “the Supreme Rada of Crimea is not as
independent as a first glance might suggest.”
Intead, it is “completely run” by
Yanukovich, the deputy ays. It is “led by and consists entirely of the Party of
the Regions, and the prime minister, Anatoly Mogilev, is a creature of the
Donetsk” mafia. Consequently, all its
declarations, which many see as an expression of local opinion, are anything
but.
All this often
has been lost sight of as Moscow journalists write article with titles like “The
Crimean Card is Again in Play” and “Crimea is a Russian Autonomy” (ng.ru/cis/2014-02-06/1_crym.html
and rusk.ru/newsdata.php?idar=64727) and Russian nationalists like Konstantin Zatulin
fan the flames among their counterparts in Crimea (new-sebastopol.com/news/novosti_sevastopolya/Zatulin_razve_sudba_Krima_reshaetsya_tolko_v_Krimu).
Moskal’s comments are thus especially
important now for three reasons. First, many in Moscow view Crimea as a region
that the Russian Federation should “reclaim” and that its population would welcome
such a shift. In fact, it is far from
clear that the ethnic Russian majority there would want to see such a change.
Second, many, thanks to the
arguments of many in Moscow, view the Crimean Tatars as an Islamist and
national threat to Ukrainian territorial integrity and worry about Crimean
Tatar contacts with Turkey (turkist.org/2014/02/chubarov-erdogan.html).In reality, the
Crimean Tatars, however rocky their relations with Kyiv have been since 1991
and whatever their ultimate goals, are neither Muslim radicals nor enemies of
Ukraine.
And third, the deputy’s words
suggest that Ukrainians not only need to recognize this reality but to be more
supportive of the Crimean Tatars than they have been in the past, helping
rather than hindering both the return of the rest of the community from Soviet-imposed
exile to Central Asia and the restoration of their property and national rights.
The Ukrainian Tatars have supported the Maidan
in Ukraine since the beginning of the revolutionary movement in Kyiv. They are the
natural allies of Ukrainians concerned about the future of their country and
its territorial integrity and in no way the Islamic threat that many in Moscow
have implied as part of its larger effort to discredit Ukraine’s turn to
Europe.
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