Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 1 – Faced with growing
speculation in Moscow that he has is becoming a liability for Vladimir Putin,
Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov has stepped up his diplomatic activity in the
Middle East to buy himself insurance against the possibility that he will be
dismissed, according to Russian experts.
At the same time, they suggest,
Putin may be making use of Kadyrov in Syria not only as the conflict there
changes from a primarily military one to a political one but also to redirect
his protégé’s actions away from Russian domestic affairs where the Chechen
leader doesn’t seem able to keep out of trouble and thus embarrass the Putin.
Kadyrov’s most recent entry into the
Middle East involved the visit to Syria last week by the head of the Muslim
Spiritual Directorate of Chechnya, Salakh Mezhiyev. The mufti was received by Bashar Asad, and the
two agreed that Damascus would open a branch of its university in Grozny and
that Russia would recognize Syrian diplomas.
The Kavkaz-Uzel news agency
interviewed three experts on the meaning of this trip and other recent Kadyrov
foreign policy forays including the dispatch of Chechen police and then a
battalion of Chechen soldiers (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/301952/).
Aleksey Makarkin,
the vice president of the Moscow Center for Political Research, says that “Ramzan
Kadyrov is stressing that he can be useful to the federal center not only in
the North Caucasus but also in the Middle East and in Syria in particular,”
that he has personal ties with leaders there and that as a Muslim he enjoys
special access.
The reason the latter is so
important in the case of Syria is that “Asad is an Alawite,” the Moscow
commentator says. Many Sunni theologians
“don’t even consider the Alawites to be Muslims;” and consequently, Asad is
grateful to Kadyrov for providing a patina of legitimacy on him among the
Islamic community.
Makarkin adds that Kadyrov could
only have made his gesture, however, if it had been fully coordinated with and
approved by the Kremlin, which likely gave its blessing because Putin wants to
stress that Moscow’s actions in the Middle East are not “a crusade of
Christians against Muslims” but rather a counter-terrorist operation.
Akhmet Yarlykanov of the Moscow
Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology agrees that Kadyrov in no way has been
operating independently in this sphere.
But the Chechen leader’s actions have increased his standing in Moscow
because a Muslim talking to a Muslim in the Middle East helps promote Russian
government goals.
And Denis Sokolov, a specialist on
the region at RAMSCON, says that the Kremlin especially needs the kind of
assistance Kadyrov can provide in this regard because the conflict in Syria is
shifting from a primarily military to a primarily political one and the Kremlin
has “no ‘human resources’ besides Kadyrov” to promote the latter.
At the same time, Sokolov continues,
Putin is likely very interested in keeping Kadyrov busy in an area where he
will spark less controversy than has been the case recently with the reports of
anti-LGBT actions in Chechnya. In short,
Kadyrov’s actions in Syria benefit both him and Putin – and that is the best
reason for thinking that they are taking place now.
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