Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 30 – The Russian
general staff has announced that it will draft young men from Chechnya this
fall for the first time in 20 years and will begin drafting that cohort from
occupied Crimea and Sevastopol next spring, an indication of just how hard
Moscow is having to work to compensate for demographic shortfalls among ethnic
Russians.
Today, the Russian general staff
said it would draft 154,100 people in the upcoming fall draft, a slight
increase over the 153,200 it drafted last spring, but the new draft will be
different: Moscow said it plans to draft 500 young men from Chechnya, the first
time it has done so since Soviet times (echo.msk.ru/news/1409550-echo.html).
Meanwhile, the Russian military said
it would begin the Russian draft in newly-annexed Crimea next spring because as of January 1,
2015, “all laws of the Russian Federation will be applied in their full extent
to the residents of Crimea and Sevastopol,” including the draft (nr2.com.ua/News/politics_and_society/Vesnoy-krymchan-prizovut-v-armiyu-RF-81125.html).
The decision to resume drafting
young men in the North Caucasus reflects in the first instance Moscow’s need to
find more manpower at a time when the number of draft-age ethnic Russians is
declining, even if it means taking in men many commanders would prefer not to
have in their units lest they cause trouble in the ranks or subsequently use
the military skills they acquire against Russian forces.
But it also reflects pressure from
North Caucasus leaders. On the one hand, they want the military to resume the
draft there in order to cut unemployment among the young, a status that they
say often makes such people more susceptible to the arguments of the militants,
and to give these young men the ability to get jobs in the police.
And on the other, these leaders
point out, Moscow’s failure to draft in the North Caucasus in recent years has
been an even greater recruiting tool for the militants: The latter point out
that by not drafting North Caucasians, the Russian government is saying that it
doesn’t view them as full citizens. In that event, the militants say, why not
struggle against Moscow?
The extension of the draft to Crimea and
Sevastopol presents another set of problems.
While some ethnic Russians there may be quite willing to serve in the
Russian military, many Ukrainians and Crimean Tatars will certainly view this
as the most unwelcome extension of Russian power yet and quite possibly resist.
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