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  • MOSCOW: Russian analyst predicts ultimate future of former USSR - pa

    Russian analyst predicts ultimate future of former USSR - paper

    Rossiyskaya Gazeta, Moscow
    17 May 05

    The political elite is clearly seriously frightened by events in the
    CIS and is continuing to speculate on whether a "colour" revolution
    threatens Russia. As a rule the answer is in the negative. However,
    yesterday Stanislav Belkovskiy, the director of the National Strategy
    Institute, came up with the following prediction: in the next few
    years the wave of revolutions in post-Soviet space could encompass
    the remaining Asian countries of the region and then spread to Russia.

    "Armenia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan - revolution is most
    likely in these countries," the political analyst said, including
    the states in the top risk category. And the brutal suppression of
    the uprising in Uzbekistan's Andijon will merely be the precursor to
    a revolution in the country which will peak in two years' time. "In
    the absence of specific ideologies, Islam will fill the vacuum created
    by Karimov," Belkovskiy said.

    He rejected suggestions that revolutions in the countries of the former
    USSR were being implanted from outside with the participation of the
    United States, although it was the Americans who had seized the status
    of regional power from Russia. The coups were being provoked primarily
    by internal factors, while external factors were secondary. The
    replacement of ruling corporations with the participation of the
    masses is taking place for the following reasons: the blocking of
    vertical mobility in the regime; the lack of legitimacy of the regime;
    the splitting of elites; the lack of a positive image of the future;
    the existence of an opposition; the regime's unpreparedness to use
    force; unresolved ethnic and religious problems; the merging of the
    bureaucracy with state power. All these conditions, the political
    analyst believes, are present to some degree or other in the countries
    of post-Soviet space.

    As for Russia, which was included by Belkovskiy in the second risk
    category along with Azerbaijan, so far a revolutionary scenario
    does not threaten it. The Kremlin's traditional legitimacy, formed
    in our country many centuries ago back in the days of the monarchy,
    is shoring up the country. But that certainly does not mean that this
    state of affairs will remain in the future. In addition, some of the
    above symptoms are already manifesting themselves.

    In Russia revolution will be the finale to the delegitimization
    of the regime as a result of the country's disintegration. The
    most likely territories which could split from the country are the
    large national republics and also Siberia. In five years' time the
    Chinese population in Siberia will be such that they will be able to
    form their own political forces. "Preventing a revolution in Russia
    and preventing Russia's disintegration is one and the same thing.
    Revolution in Russia is possible only if everything collapses,"
    Belkovskiy is convinced.

    An alternative to revolution in Russia could be a peaceful state "coup"
    by which the political analyst means a constitutional transfer of power
    within the framework of presidential and parliamentary elections. The
    political analyst sees the advent to power of a left-nationalist
    coalition as most likely.

    Belkovskiy believes that Russia will not be a classic parliamentary
    republic because of existing traditions. Consequently, an acceptable
    model of presidential power must be created which will stand outside
    the economy. And a parliamentary majority government and the people's
    elected representatives themselves must be responsible for the economy.

    On the other hand, the political analyst believes that Belarus and
    Turkmenistan should be the least afraid of revolutions. However
    much the West may call the regimes that have taken shape in these
    countries dictatorships, the regimes here are maintained on the basis
    of the state leaders' charisma. But despite their unshakeableness,
    [President] Alyaksandr Lukashenka and [President] Saparmyrat Nyyazow
    should prepare for internal plots within their own elites - their
    closest associates could in fact prove to be potential revolutionaries.
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