Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 19 – The focus
of the international media has shifted from Ukraine to Syria, just as Vladimir
Putin hoped because the West seems incapable of focusing on more than one issue
at a time, Oleg Shro says. But in doing so, the media are failing to note that the
Kremlin leader is ready to attack on many fronts to overload the capacity of
the West to respond.
Because of that, the Ukrainian analyst
says, Western leaders must consider where Putin might move next in order to
block him or at least be prepared to respond. If they do, he says, they will be
forced to conclude that Central Asia and especially Uzbekistan is high on Putin’s
list (nr2.com.ua/News/world_and_russia/Rossiya-nakanune-novogo-pohoda-v-Turkestan-106486.html).
Putin’s readiness
to “conduct military actions on two or three fronts and perhaps even more” at
one time, Shro says, is explained not by the weakness of his opponents but
rather by the fact that his current opponents “do not consider [Moscow] such a
serious threat that they must react to it with serious efforts.”
There are three reasons for this
dangerous situation, he suggests. First, Russia still has “’the aura’” of a
country that until recently was “a reliable and predictable partner of both
Europe and the US” and thus can count on Western leaders to hope and believe
that it can be returned to the fold.
Second, Putin is very aware that
whatever problems the Russian economy now faces, it has “a simply colossal”
resource base, “especially in comparison with its nearest neighbors,” and thus
is in a position to act from a position of strength against those neighbors,
particularly if the West doesn’t want to oppose him actively.
And third, Putin’s efforts to
restore Moscow’s primacy over the former Soviet space reflect his desire to
create a “buffer zone” for himself and his country, one where the values he is
promoting at home will bleed over into the neighbors and thus help to keep out
the influence of other countries and especially those of the West.
What the Kremlin leader is engaged
in then, he suggests, is the organization of a criminal world against the world
of law and order. That is stark but it is true: “Russia is not capable of
offering the contemporary world an alternative civilizational project.” The
only thing it can offer is a Donbas “at the planetary level, the realization of
an anti-utopia in the style of Mad Max.”
“If Russia were capable of offering
an alternative civilizational project, even a variation on the currently
existing one, everything would look different,” Shro continues. “This would be
a different work, and the actions of Russia would not recall the actions of
powers in the 18th or 19th centuries.” But that is not the case, and the world must
eventually recognize this.
Any discussion of “geopolitical
buffers around Russia” must include not only Ukraine, Belarus, the Baltics and
the Caucasus, but also Central Asia, especially since in recent years, Moscow’s
influence in that region has fallen sharply relative to that of China and the
United States.
In Central Asia, Shro continues, “the
chief and central player is Uzbekistan,” which has played an independent role
over the last 15 years because it is both politically and economically the core
of the region. Ruled since 1988 by the same leader, Islam Karimov, Uzbekistan
had been moving away from Russia.
But “now one can see a reverse
process which is connected above all with the cooling of relations with the US
and the introduction of a sanctions regime against the leadership of Uzbekistan
and even members of Karimov’s family” because of Tashkent’s poor record with
regard to human rights.
“In general,” Shro
argues, Uzbekistan resembles today’s Russia given its repression at home and
problems abroad. And “these circumstances are pushing Uzbekistan into Russia’
embrace, because even China is unwilling to get involved with a country” with
so many problems, including water disputes with its neighbors.
Moscow clearly hopes that Tashkent
will recognize that its best prospects for the future lie with Russia. “On the
one hand, Uzbekistan like Russia, has border conflicts with practically all its
neighbors.” And on the other, Uzbekistan
is a choke point for the other Central Asian countries because it is through
Uzbekistan that most transportation routes pass.
Thus, attracting Uzbekistan to its
side is one of Moscow’s major strategic goals because it would allow Russia to
reduce or even exclude the influence of China and the US in central Asia, Shro
says. The only question now is how that such a shift will happen, by peaceful
means or otherwise.
“If [Uzbekistan] makes concessions
to Russia, then this will look like peaceful expansion,” but that may not
happen given Karimov’s independent streak. And thus it is completely possible
that there will be a conflict orchestrated by Moscow to bring Tashkent to heel.
Among the levers Moscow could use
would be the financing of local Islamists who have shown themselves to be quite
prepared to fight with the Uzbek authorities. Such an approach may be
especially likely now given Ukraine and Syria and all the talk about the ISIS
threat to Central Asia from Afghanistan.
And consequently, there is another
Moscow lever that should not be ignored: the exacerbation of border conflicts
in the region followed by Russia’s offer of playing the role of “peacemaker”
there. Should that happen, Shro
concludes, it would constitute “a new Turkestan campaign” by Moscow.
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