Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 7 – Moscow plans
to sign a new security agreement with Abkhazia and South Osetia by the end of
this month, Russian news outlets report, because opposition from other members
of the Organization of the Treaty for Collective Security do not recognize them
as independent states.
These outlets, including “Izvestiya,”
say, the Prague-based “Caucasus Times” reports, that “the dividends Russia will
receive” from such a step “are still not clear,” although in Abkhazia, the
paper says, officials hope that it will open the way for the dispatch of more
Russian military equipment and ultimately membership in Moscow-led groups (caucasustimes.com/article.asp?id=21357).
But there is another possibility,
one not mentioned by either of these sources, that may be even more important:
By signing such an agreement with Abkhazia and South Osetia, the Kremlin may be
seeking to set a precedent for how it will interact with other “unrecognized” states
including Transdniestria and, potentially, “Novorossiya” in Ukraine.
Such an accord could solve two
problems Moscow now faces in that regard. On the one hand, it cannot legally
move to send them arms except for police forces under international law. And on
the other, it cannot hope to include them in its Eurasian projects given the
opposition of other members of those groups to their membership.
But as Vladislav Shurygin, a Moscow
commentator on military issues, points out, “Russia has its own interests which
are different from the interests of the Organization for the Treaty on
Collective Security” and thus must find different ways of advancing them even
if it has to do an end run around their objections.
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