Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 1 – A Russian nationalist
commentator says that Moldova is on the brink of a civil war between those who
want to keep the country independent and those who want to unite with Romania,
that such a war would lead to the disintegration of Moldova, and that this
danger is being increased by the actions of the United Statess.
In an essay for the Stoletiye portal, Vladimir Malyshev argues
that Bucharest is colluding with activists in the regions and politicians in
Chisinau to promote the unification of the two states, something that could
happen this summer when the Romanian and Moldovan parliaments hold a joint
session (stoletie.ru/tekuschiiy_moment/prizrak_grazhdanskoj_vojny_300.htm).
The prime ministers of the two
countries agreed on this joint meeting when they met in Chisinau last week,
despite the opposition of the Moldovan president; and to date, more than 50 villages
and towns have declared that they would like to see Moldova and Romania united
in one country, something that Malyshev says would result in the disappearance
of Moldova.
If some in Moldova continue to seek
unity with Romania, the Russian commentator says, both non-Moldovan areas in
Moldova and many Moldovans will oppose them, possibly to the point of armed
conflict. Transdniestria would never agree to be part of a Romanian state, and the
Gagauz autonomy has already asked Turkey to defend it against such a prospect.
In addition, the Bulgarian-majority
regions would probably follow Gagauzia in seeking independent statehood if Moldova
and Romania were to come together; and many ordinary Moldovans, including those
who voted for the current president Igor Dodon would oppose such a step as
well.
“Therefore,” Malyshev says, “uniting
with Romania threatens to result not only in the death of Moldovan statehood
but the loss of a significant part of its territory.” Dodon has been warning against this and
demanding that Moldova maintain its neutral position in the world by standing
apart from the alliances and organizations of both the West and Russia.
Exacerbating this
situation, he continues, is Washington which was recently visited by the pro-Romanian
Moldovan politician who lost the presidency to Dodon and where the House of
Representatives has issued a report calling for expanded American involvement
in Moldova to counter Russian propaganda, code he suggests, for the US to act
as he says it did in Ukraine.
Malyshev’s predictions may be overly
alarmist, but they are important for two reasons. On the one hand, they suggest
how many in Moscow view the situation in Moldova and how the Russian side hopes
to use the ethnic minorities in Transdniestria, Gagauzia and elsewhere to
oppose even a rapprochement between Moldova and Romania, let alone unification.
And on the other, his argument
highlights the ways in which Moscow now acts on the assumption that behind any
move that Moscow doesn’t like stand the Americans, a form of political paranoia
that raises the stakes in each conflict and makes their resolution more rather
than less difficult.
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