Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 11 – Moscow analyst
Yury Khristenzen says that Moscow plans to “export separatism” across the
entire former Soviet space, including Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania to break
those countries to its will, confident that it can do so because the West will
not be willing to go to war against a nuclear power to defend them.
In the third and concluding part of
his survey of Russia’s wars, Khristenzen argues that the Kremlin “has drawn a
red line on the border of the former USSR and identified [as its priority
targets] those countries closest mentally, linguistically and in terms of
religion” (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5875D43F75311).
As evidence of this, he points to
the following: At the end of 2013, shortly before Moscow’s Anschluss of Crimea,
Tamara Guzenkova, the deputy director of the influential Russian Institute for
Strategic Studies, told a group in Moscow: “You can’t even imagine how far we
can go in order to preserve our positions in Ukraine.”
And Khristenzen insists that it is
not a matter of NATO bases on Russia’s borders given that “no one will fight
with a nuclear power,” a reality that the Kremlin can use against all and
sundry. But among the most important
weapons in Moscow’s arsenal are plans to create “peoples republics” within
these countries of interest as a basis for projecting Russian power.
Many associate this idea with
Vladimir Putin, but in fact, it has a long history extending back at least to
August 1991 when supporters of the coup against Gorbachev planned to form such “peoples
republics” in Estonia and Latvia in order to block their recovery of national independence.
This plan was
described by Viktor Alksnis, a member of the Union group of the USSR Supreme
Soviet, who said this was the application of a more general principle that the
coup organizers had come up with (youtube.com/watch?v=6efnb7JZJKY&feature=youtu.be
and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0UwDQSiJ-kc&feature=youtu.be).
The defeat of the coup, Western
pressure and the extension of NATO membership to the three Baltic countries
prevented Moscow from carrying out these plans. But as Khristenzen notes, “Moldova,
Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Ukraine” remain in significantly more
difficult situations.
And he argues that the Kremlin has
only delayed but not cancelled its plans to use this tactic even against the
Baltic states. “In the event of the weakening of the US and the EU, it is
completely possible that a Narva, Khokhta-Yavelskaya, Shlachininkaiskaya or
other ‘peoples republics’ will appear on their territories.”
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