Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 22 – Many Ukrainian
commentators have focused on Transdniestria as an example of the way in which Moscow
uses a frozen conflict to influence a former Soviet republic, but they might
learn more from considering the case of Gagauzia, an autonomy that was
reintegrated into Moldova but remains a tool for Russian leverage there.
If Transdniestria demonstrates the
ways in which Moscow can use a part of Moldova that remains de facto outside
of Moldova’s legal space, Gagauzia, a Christian Turkic republic of some 200,000
people southeast of Chisinau, shows how Moscow can and does use an autonomy it has
long supported that de jure is fully part of Moldova.
A few Ukrainian analysts, Sergey llchenko
most prominently, have considered the Gagauz precedent (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2016/07/what-moscow-appears-to-have-done-in.html), but even they
have failed to consider how extensively Moscow has intervened there or made use
of its power (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2016/07/russia-and-gagauz-expanding-ties-at.html
and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2015/03/moscow-overplayed-its-hand-in-gagauz.html).
Whenever something is going on in or
with Moldova that Moscow disapproves of, Russia has orchestrated Gagauz opposition,
be it to rapprochement with Romania and Europe (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/01/to-oppose-moldovas-rapprochement-with.html), the subordination
of Moldvan Orthodox (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2018/10/fight-over-subordination-of-orthodox.html), language (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2017/12/language-issue-seen-making-gagauzia.html) or Transdiestria
(windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2015/09/moscow-mulls-mobilizing-transdniestria.html).
And what is still worse or at least
far more at variance with international and Moldovan law, Russian “diplomats”
in Chisinau have even gone so far as to recruit Gagauz residents to fight in Moscow’s
imperial war in Ukraine (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2017/06/russian-diplomats-chisinau-expelled.html).
Now that there appears t be movement
regarding Transdniestria, Mscw is again playing the Gagauz card, with apparent
success in Chisinau (ondsk.ru/news/2019/10/23/gagauzia-trebuet-u-kishineva-realnyu-avtonomiu-49299.html
and ru.sputnik.md/politics/20191023/27958970/pravitelstvo-vneslo-izmeneniya-v-sostav-komissii-po-reintegratsii.html).
And in yet another twist, the Russian authorities
appear to be making use of their expanded cooperation with Turkey, which also has played a role in Gagauzia, to ensure that Ankara helps Moscow make use of
that autonomy against Chisinau in exactly the ways the Kremlin
wants (ng.ru/cis/2019-10-24/5_7711_alignment.html).
That is another and disturbing
result of the cozier relationship between Moscow and Ankara because until
recently, Turkish involvement in Gagauzia was something anti-Moscow Gagauz and
Moldovans more generally counted no to limit Moscow’s influence. Now that appears
to be gone or at least much reduced.
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