Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 14 – Two telegram channels, Nezygar
and Kremlyovsky bezBashenik, report
that the FSB is planning to set up special “Turkish departments” in its
Economic Security Service to combat pan-Turkism, an effort in which the Presidential
Administration is also involved.
“The
goal is the neutralization of the work of the Turkish special services toward
the establishment of a single Turkic state” given that “Turkey has finally
become a center of the Islamic world,” the former says, and that Ankara has
already established close ties with Kyiv, a worrisome development from Moscow’s
point of view.
And
it is doing so, the latter reports, because of what some in Moscow see as “the ineffectiveness
of the Service for the Defense of the Constitutional Order in the struggle with
terrorism “inside Turkey itself,” IdelReal journalist Ramazan Alpaut recounts (idelreal.org/a/29759517.html).
Moscow worried not only about the
spread of terrorism but also about Turkey’s promotion of pan-Turkist ideas in
the North Caucasus and the Middle Volga, Nezygar continues. “Turkic-language peoples of Russia live
mostly in such regions as Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, Chuvashia, Bashkortostan,
Kabardino-Balkaria, Daghestan, Karachayevo-Cherkessia and other regions of the
North Caucasus.”
“To one degree or another,” the
telegram channel continues, “the ideas of pan-Turkish have penetrated everywhere,
but at various levels and various amounts. Many say that they exist most strongly
among young members of Tatar elites.”
Rakhim Rakhimov, an independent
analyst, says that he views these reports as “disinformation.” Turkey does not
have the significant influence among the Turkic peoples of Russia that such efforts
suggest. He suggests that the reports
are intended as a warning to Turkey not to ally itself with Ukraine.
It is also possible, Rakhimov says,
that there are anti-Turkish groups within the Russian elite who are not happy
with Moscow’s rapprochement with Ankara.
Another expert, Osman Pashayev of the
UA-Krym television company, says that he does not think that Turkey is
currently actively promoting pan-Turkist ideas in Russia. There may be some in Turkish elites who would
like to do so, he says; but such an effort certainly is not settled state
policy. At most such reports are a warning to Ankara and to regional elites.
According to Alpaut, Turkey appears to
have responded to this already, with an article suggesting that Moscow is
seeking to “marginalize” the Muslim population of the Russian Federation (trtworld.com/opinion/is-russia-on-the-path-to-marginalising-its-muslim-population-23927).
That article reflects both the
historical intertwining of Islamic interests and pan-Turkish ideas and the
current interest in Ankara in presenting itself as the defender of the Faith. Those two factors may also help to explain
why Moscow is nervous and why the telegram channel reports are true even if they
are based on a misreading of what is happening on the ground.
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