Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 16 – Vladimir Putin’s
response to a question about Russia’s possible annexation of South Osetia has divided
Russian experts about this possibility, with some suggesting that Putin’s words
show that he will not annex the breakaway Georgian region but others saying
that Putin will do just that after a referendum there.
Oleg Krasnov, a journalist for the
Kavkaz-Uzel portal, repeats Putin’s words on his “open line” program and then
offers the views of three experts about this issue, Orkhan Zhemal of Forbes,
commentator Dmitry Oreshkin, and Ana Amelina of the Caucasus Geopolitics Club (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/280977/).
Asked about whether Russia would
take in South Osetia, the Kremlin leader said that he had not discussed this
issue in detail with the South Osetian leadership. At the same time, he said,
Moscow would not oppose a referendum on the issue and that “nothing restrains
us besides the interests of the South Osetian people.”
And he then added, “but for the time
being we do not know what will be put at the center of this referendum and how
the questions will be asked in their final form. Depending on that,” Putin said, “we will
think more about this.”
Dzhemal said that Putin’s answer
means that Moscow will not unite South Osetia with the Russian Federation, and
he noted that “Russia considers South Osetia an independent state only formally
given that the republic is supported at Russia’s expense and the majority of
local residents have Russian passports.”
“South Osetia,” he continued, “is in
no way distinguished from any other Russian region” except for some lines on
paper. And consequently, any referendum
there is so much waste of time because “Putin has made it clear that he will
not take South Osetia into Russia.”
Oreshkin, however, suggested that
Putin had not made any final decisions and wouldn’t until after the referendum. “Everything will be decided in Moscow after
[that].” And it doesn’t matter whether the Kremlin says it has nothing to do
with the referendum or not. Neither position changes anything.
Amelina for her part argued that
Putin’s words mean that the Kremlin leader has already decided to absorb South
Osetia if the South Osetians take the necessary steps to adjust to Russian
realities and if such an annexation is useful for Moscow. That is all the more
likely given the recent events in Nagorno-Karabakh which show just how fragile
peace is in the Caucasus.
She said that those who think
otherwise are wrong. Russia is quite
prepared to absorb South Osetia. In fact, she concluded, “Russia is prepared
for even bolder steps.”
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