Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 30 – Ever since the
Russian invasion of Georgia in August 2008, South Osetian leaders have wanted
their republic to be annexed by the Russian Federation and combined with the
larger North Osetian Republic. But Moscow had been reluctant to take that step.
On the one hand, the Kremlin clearly
believed that any act of annexation would generate far more serious reaction
abroad than simply creating another “unrecognized” territory on the former
Soviet space. And on the other, Moscow
viewed the combination of the two Osetias as something that could trigger more
instability in the North Caucasus
But now in the wake of the Crimean
Anschluss, an act that many in the West appear to be on the way to accepting
and more sadly to legitimating and with suggestions that South Osetia could
enter the Russian Federation as a separate federal subject, Moscow’s
calculations may be changing.
Although Russian diplomats continue
to press Tbilisi to sign peace agreements with South Osetia and Abkhazia, a
step that would point to a continuation of the status quo (ng.ru/cis/2014-03-28/7_gruzia.html),
a leading Russian analyst of the North Caucasus is arguing that Moscow now has “no
alternative” to annexing South Osetia and nothing to fear if it does.
In an essay on APN.ru, Yana Amelina,
a senior specialist at the influential Russian Institute for Strategic Studies,
says that what she calls “the Crimean precedent” is making the issue of the
future status of the Republic of South Osetia “particularly significant” (apn.ru/publications/article31328.htm).
“After Crimea,” she writes, the
longstanding dream of many in South Osetia to become part of the Russian
Federation “may quite quickly become a reality.” Indeed, she says, Osetians
both south and north of the existing border of the Russian Federation say that
it is hard to imagine a better time for taking such a step.
At a March 19 conference on “The
Situation in Crimea and Ukraine. Prospects for Development and Search for a Way
Out” in North Caucasus, “all who touched on this theme” spoke in favor of
annexation, including the first president of the republic, a leading Osetin
historian and Amelina herself.
Mira Tskhovrebova, the deputy chairman of the South
Osetian parliament, created “a small sensation by declaring that ‘Crimea has
changed everything’ and ‘if this is a window of opportunity, it beyond doubt
must be used.’” If Moscow gives the go ahead, she continued, we can organize a
referendum for unification just like in Crimea.
The arguments for unification,
Amelina says, are well known: Such an action would allow the Osetins to
develop, it would provide greater security for them and for others in the
region, and it would allow Osetia to become “an advance post of Russia” in the
Caucasus as a whole.
According to Amelina, there are no
good arguments against unification, especially since concerns about “’ what
will the West say’ have lost their importance” for Russia. And
she insists, there are compelling reasons to move now so that the Osetins in the
south will have better socio-economic prospects.
Moreover,
she says, “the time of small states, which objectively do not have the
geopolitical, human, material, and moral resources needed for all-around
development is passing.” And it can pass “very quickly” if Russia recognizes
the need to make such “fateful choices.”
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