Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 27 – As a result
of its imposition of “aggressive” colonial rule both at the federal district
and republic level in the North Caucasus, the Kremlin is inserting several
delayed action mines that are likely to explode when Vladimir Putin leaves the
scene and cost Russia control not only of Chechnya but of other republics there
as well, Vadim Sidorov says.
Indeed, by failing to develop
genuine federalism and relying on the populations and governments those
populations might have elected, the regionalist commentator says, the Putin
government is doing more to undermine Russian rule in that restive region than
any of the existing national movements (region.expert/caucasus/).
The fundamental
problem is that the Kremlin wants to impose outside rule, often of those with
military backgrounds, not only at the level of the North Caucasus Federal
District but in all of the republics that FD consists of because it views the
continued existence of any opposition or even civil society as “an
impermissible luxury” not only there but throughout Russia.
According to Sidorov, “Ingushetia
all these years has remained a problem for the Kremlin precisely because of the
republic spirit maintained in it,” a spirit that has helped power the Ingush
opposition which also draws support for the republic’s Muslim Spiritual
Directorate (MSD) and Council of Teips.
Moscow has deployed its regional “general
governorship” against Ingushetia, not only from above but by installing military
figures and outsiders within the republic who can be counted on to impose the
center’s will against the restive population. And it has changed republic
leaders as needed to try to break the Ingush.
The central authorities have made
similar moves against the other republics in the region, but Chechnya seems an
exception. Its ruler Ramzan Kadyrov “possessed enormous authority and more than
that he is permitted to have what the other republics can only dream about –
his own army of some 30,000 men.”
But Sidorov argues, citing the words
of Chechen blogger Tumso Abdurakhmanov, the things Kadyrov has “are indications
not of independence but on the contrary of the absolute dependence of the leader
of Chechnya on the Kremlin.” That Chechnya is beyond the control of Moscow now
is “an illusion,” the Chechen blogger says.
At the present time, Chechnya is “more
under the control of the Kremlin than any other region,” Abdurakhmanov says.
But these situations Ingush and
Chechen highlight Moscow’s “dilemma.” Is it better to have in place “an
ambitious local leader who totally controls local society or to have an
appointee the loyalty of whom is not in question but who is incapable of
establishing full control over the local milieu?”
Kadyrov’s status is totally
dependent on his personal relationship with Putin, and when Putin departs from
the scene, so too will Kadyrov, something that will open up two scenarios. The
Kremlin may try to move as it has in Chechnya by imposing a Chechen on Grozny
who is an outsider, or it may simply lose control of that republic as a result
of power struggles in Moscow.
The latter is more likely given that
Chechnya retains at least as much “protest potential” as shown by Ingushetia.
Moscow has not taken the steps necessary to change that, relying instead on
personal vassal relations with a republic leader. Once he is gone, so too will
Moscow’s position in Grozny.
Given that likelihood, the
possibility that other republics in the region may this time around follow a similar
path is something that no one should discount and that everyone should recognize
whose policies have led to that outcome.
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