Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 16 – An article in
Moscow’s Novaya gazeta two days ago suggested Ramzan Kadyrov had
launched a major purge of his government to get rid of those who opposed him,
an action the Chechen leader immediately denied as the work of his enemies (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2019/10/14/82356-chistka-klassa-lyuks).
Analysts
who follow Chechnya say that there could be officials who are “really
dissatisfied” with Kadyrov, but they aren’t going to launch any move against him
without support from Moscow. Indeed, there are unlikely to be reports about
such opposition unless the center wants them to appear (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/341246/ and kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/341197/).
And that means, these analysts say,
that the interesting part of the Novaya story is in Moscow rather than
Grozny. While Kadyrov may be purging people – he has to periodically to
maintain himself – the question really is: what is Moscow is playing at. Is
this a simple reminder that the center has leverage against him? Or is it the
opening move in a plan to oust him?
At the same time, these observers
who include Maksim Shevchenko say, Kadyrov himself wouldn’t launch any major
move to purge his government without the support of some in Moscow, even if
dismissals in the Chechen capital would undercut other officials in the Russian
one.
Shevchenko says that he allows that “officials
in local places are not very satisfied with the leadership of Chechnya and may
in telephone conversations and personal interaction be expressing their
dissatisfaction. I even do not doubt this. Naturally, loyalty is the most important
criterion and factor of stability in a state of frozen conflict.”
Consequently, periodic purges are
required to send a message that loyalty is required, he says; but every such
purge and especially every new report about them in the Moscow media highlights
something many appear to have forgotten: Kadyrov’s power rests on his use of
force almost alone, and he is thus more vulnerable that many think.
And this vulnerability comes not
just from Moscow which has it own reasons both for supporting and limiting him or
from the surviving members of those who fought him and Russian forces in the
past but also from those within his own regime who also fought the center
earlier.
That in turn suggests that Kadyrov’s
hold on power in Grozny may not be as tight as many assume, including Vladimir
Putin, who may be afraid to get rid of his protégé precisely because the
Kremlin leader knows that if Kadyrov goes, those in Grozny likely to emerge
after him will be far less willing to cooperate with the powers who installed
him.
They may in fact be far more open
that either Kadyrov or Putin thinks to those in Chechnya and Chechens now beyond
its borders who have opposed both.
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