Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 28 – In both a
transparent act of intimidation and a reflection of the fragility of the
Russian Federation, Elena Meygun of the Nazaccent.ru portal says that the failure
of Tatarstan and Sakha to obey Moscow’s orders to break ties with Turkey
threatens to trigger two Ukraines within Russia’s own borders.
Four of Russia’s six Turkic
republics quickly followed Moscow’s November 27 call for them to break ties with
the international TURKSOY cultural union, but a month later, two – Tatarstan and
Sakha – have not, suggesting, the analyst says that they have not yet made up
their minds whether they are Russians or Turks (nazaccent.ru/content/18885-svoj-ili-tyurksoj.html).
If the cooling of relations between Russia
and Turkey continues, she continues, “the Russian Turkic peoples risk finding
themselves in the very same situation in which not so long ago were drawn the
Slavic peoples, the Russians and the Ukrainians. Alas, the degree of
confrontation in the world is growing.”
“The main thing is that [such a
conflict] not spill over from the foreign policy arena to within [Russia.]” And
Meygun says that “we will find out very soon” whether the leaders of these two
republics have “the wisdom, sense of responsibility and breadth of political
views” to avoid such a disaster.
She cites the argument of Rais
Suleymanov, a specialist on the Middle Volga at the Institute of National
Strategy, who has frequently accused the Tatars in particular of disloyalty to
Moscow. By not speaking against Moscow, he
says, “Tatarstan has sent signals to Turkey that we do not support Putin.”
That is because, Suleymanov says, “only
the naïve would assert that TURKSOY, the headquarters of which is in Ankara, is
only about songs” and Turkey’s “’soft power.’”
But Tatar nationalists are pushing hard not to break relations with it,
and Putin himself has not weighed in on this issue at a time when Kazan is
seeking to retain the office of republic president.
Although four of the six Turkic
republics have done what Moscow wants, there is evidence that they did so
reluctantly and have gone out of their way to stress that ending ties with a
Turkish government operation in no way signals any lessening of their desire to
have close ties with Turkey and the Turkish people.
Thus, when the Chuvash National
Congress came out in support of Putin’s policy on Turkey four days ago, its
speakers indicated that this action was only about the governments involved and
not about the peoples. In time, that may be an equally large problem for Moscow
(chnk.ru/a/news/549.html and irekle.org/news/i2022.html).
One indication of that possibility
is an article by Kyamran Agayev on the Kasparov.ru portal. The Moscow commentator argues that the
Turkish crisis is now affecting the Turkic peoples of Russia and leading them
to conclude that as in Stalin’s time, the Kremlin is leading an anti-Turkic
crusade that will harm them as well (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=56803A50B520E).
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