Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 12 – Since
Vladimir Putin came to power, Moscow has used a carrots-and-sticks strategy to
try to keep the North Caucasus relatively calm, pouring in resources across the
board and deploying its force structures to fight its opponents when the money
isn’t enough.
That makes any decline in the amount
of resources the central government is prepared or able to send to the region
potentially dangerous not only because it is likely to lead to a re-ignition of
anti-Moscow movements in the region but also because it means that the center
will have to make broader use of its forces, something that entails domestic
costs of various kinds.
And a decline that is not across the
board but rather limited to or targeted at some republics in the region but not
others is thus potentially an indication of where the Russian government thinks
it can get away with it as well as of the places where it can’t afford to cut
back or may be forced to use more coercion in the near future.
In addition, such variegated cutbacks
have the effect of exacerbating competitions among the republics in the region,
something that may help Moscow’s divide-and-rule strategy but that will also
make it more, not less difficult for the center to control things, by
undercutting cooperation among these republics.
In a commentary for the Svobodnaya
Pressa-Yug portal today, analyst Anton Chablin says that Moscow is now
demanding that all the republics of the North Caucasus tighten their belts but
that for various reasons some of them are being required to do so more than
others and one – Chechnya – has been able to avoid doing so (yug.svpressa.ru/economy/article/142608/).
Moscow’s
new course was signaled at a meeting of the Russian Caucasus Forum in
Pyatigorsk last week, he continues. The
republics were told by Moscow officials that they were to invest the
now-limited resources in promoting economic development rather than to spend
money on social services.
Because
such social services are the primary way that the republic leaderships have of
keeping the peace, the overall cutbacks and Moscow’s order to shift spending
from them to economic investment points to both an increase in unhappiness in
the population and a growth in anti-regime activity in the short term however
wise this shift might be over the longer haul.
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