Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 11 - There are three reasons for thinking that
what Moscow is doing in Daghestan now is going to exacerbate nationality
problems across the North Caucasus and other regions as well, Valery Dzutsati
says, by ending any illusions about self-government in the regions and about
the basis of Russian rule over them.
First, in the absence of an ideology
like the Soviet one, Moscow can claim success for its purges if and only if
they produce a significant improvement in the lives of the peoples of
Daghestan. Given that Moscow is unlikely
to be able to achieve that, Dzutsati says, Moscow’s claims will be seen as illusory
(kavkazr.com/a/konec-illuzii-samoupravlenia/29029646.html).
Second, by inserting
outsiders and especially ethnic Russians, the central Russian government is
showing that it doesn’t trust or even respect the non-Russians and will use
ethnic Russians or heavily Russified others whenever there is a problem. That too will undermine any basis for loyalty
among non-Russians like the Daghestanis but hardly just among them.
And third, the Radio Svoboda commentator
says, Moscow’s turn to the use of sticks – that is, repression – shows that it
is rapidly running out of carrots – that is the possibility of buying loyalty
by providing assistance as it has done for most of the last two decades in the
North Caucasus. People there already recognize this and are drawing
conclusions.
This doesn’t mean that there is suddenly
going to arise a massive drive for independence: Putin’s Moscow still has
sufficient coercive resources and a willingness to use them in a brutal fashion
to keep people in line for awhile longer.
But the latest moves in Daghestan put Moscow and the non-Russians on a
collision course.
That is suggested, Dzutsati says in
another commentary (kavkazr.com/a/zabytoe-vosstanie-osetin/28814973.html),
but what happened in North Ossetia in 1981, when Leonid Brezhnev was in power
and communist ideology at least nominally governed what the center did. That
situation, now almost “forgotten,” very much resembles the one in Daghestan
now.
In that year, he writes, “after a
massive popular uprising in North Ossetia, Moscow also interfered in the situation
by replacing the local leadership which consisted of Ossetins with ethnic
Russians.” The period that followed, from 1982 to 1988, is still known as the Odintsovshchina after the name of the
obkom first secretary Vladimir Odintsov.
Installing ethnic Russians in place
of Ossetins, he continues, “did not have an effect on the standard of living of
the population of North Ossetia.” It did however significantly worsen “inter-ethnic
relations both between ethnic Russians and Ossetins and between Ossetins and
Ingush.” In 1992, that led to armed conflict between the latter two.
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