Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 15 – At a secret
meeting ten days ago, representatives of the Gagauz, Ukrainian and Bulgarian
minorities of Moldova as well as leaders of opposition political parties signed
an agreement to seek the federalization of Moldova now and the dismemberment of
Moldova if Chisinau goes ahead with an EU accord.
That meeting and a subsequent one last
week whose participants were then invited to meet at the Russian embassy in the
Moldovan capital declared that these groups only wanted a stronger Moldovan
state oriented toward Moscow rather than toward the EU rather than anything
more radical.
But the agreement, a copy of which
has now appeared online, statements by some of the participants to the media in
which they first denied that they had done anything untoward, and the
involvement of Russian diplomats, strongly suggest that this is part of a
Moscow-orchestrated move to undermine Moldova.
The agreement explicitly called for
transforming Moldova into “a multi-national union” neutral in international affairs,
the preservation of the culture and traditions of the country’s ethnic and
religious groups, and the equality of all “regions, nationalities and
languages,” with Moldovan and Russian required everywhere and Gagauz, Ukrainian
and Bulgarian in particular regions (deschide.md/ro/news/politic/2243/EXCLUSIV--Documentul-semnat-%E2%80%9DVale%C8%9Bii-lui-Putin%E2%80%9D-dup%C4%83-%C3%AEnt%C3%A2lnirea-SECRET%C4%82.htm).
The Moldovan site said
that what such declarations were in aid of was “a detailed plan aimed at
destabilizing the situation in the country by dividing the country into four
components – a Moldovan one with a capital in Chisinau, a Transdniestrian one
with a capital in Tiraspol, a Gagauz Peoples Republic centered on Comrat, and a
North Moldova one with a capital at Balti.
If the Moldovan government goes ahead with plans to sign accords
with the European Union, such divisions could become the basis for one or more “armed
rebellions” against the central government and declarations of state
independence by all four. Transdniestria already has, Gagauz has voted to, but
the others would be new (dw.de/moldova-%C3%AEn-pragul-unei-rebeliuni-armate/a-17699913).
Gagauz leader Mihail Formuzal was
outspoken both about tactics and strategy.
“We want to stay within Moldova’s borders with our current autonomous
status,” he said. “But the central government has adopted a course that oculd
divide the country. They want Moldova to
join NATO and the EU. We and the people of Transdniestria are against that” (al-monitor.com/pulse/politics/2014/06/moldova-gagauz-secede-crimea-scenario-economy.html#).
In the meantime and even more
immediately ominous, Ilia Uzun,a member of the Gagauz People’s Assembly, told
an unnamed ambassador in Chisinau that if Moldova moves toward Europe, “we will
return Moldova to the conditions of the 1990s” because “we young people know
how to use guns” and “we are prepared to die for our land” (dw.de/moldova-%C3%AEn-pragul-unei-rebeliuni-armate/a-17699913).
Two things make such actions
worrisome. On the one hand, they represent a recapitulation of what has
happened in Ukraine over the last several months. And on the other, they appear to be taking
place below the radar screen of many in the West who are now focused on Iraq or
at least in some cases Ukraine.
Given such inattention, these
Moscow-supported if not indeed Moscow-sponsored destabilization efforts will
have time to grow, and consequently, countering them will be far more difficult
for Chisinau and its Western partners.
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