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The coming of the micro-states

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  • The coming of the micro-states

    The coming of the micro-states


    June 05, 2006 edition

    By Fred Weir | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor

    MOSCOW ` As goes Montenegro, so goes Kosovo, Transdniestria, and South
    Ossetia?

    As Montenegro officially declared independence this weekend, accepting
    the world's welcome into the community of nations, a handful of
    obscure "statelets" are demanding the same opportunity to choose their
    own destinies.

    In the latest example, Transdniestria, a Russian-speaking enclave that
    won de facto independence in the early 1990s, declared last week that
    it will hold a Montenegro-style referendum in September as part of its
    campaign for statehood.

    Experts fear that many "frozen conflicts" around the world - in which
    a territory has gained de facto independence through war but failed to
    win international recognition - could reignite as ethnic minorities
    demand the same right to self-determination that many former Yugoslav
    territories have been offered by the international community.

    Even more significant than Montenegro's rise to statehood would be the
    international community's acceptance of Kosovo's bid for
    independence. The province of Serbia was seized by NATO in
    1999. Ongoing talks discussing that possibility are being watched with
    intense interest by rebel statelets. But as tiny, newly independent
    states such as East Timor find themselves mired in ethnic violence,
    international observers are wary of the implications of such a move.

    "If Kosovo becomes independent, this precedent will cause further
    fragmentation of the global order and lead to the creation of more
    unviable little states," predicts Dmitri Suslov, an analyst with the
    independent Council on Foreign and Defense Policy in Moscow.

    Russia has backed the emergence of several pro-Moscow separatist
    enclaves in the post-Soviet region, as a means of keeping pressure on
    defiant neighbors, but has so far been deterred from granting them
    official recognition by international strictures against changing the
    borders of existing states. Montenegro's successful May 21 vote of
    independence from Yugoslavia - recognized by the world community - has
    encouraged others' thoughts of following the same path.

    The United Nations Charter mentions both the right of
    "self-determination" of peoples and the "territorial integrity" of
    states as bedrock principles of the world order. But these principles
    come into conflict when a separatist minority threatens to rupture an
    existing country. Russia, which has a score of ethnic "republics,"
    including an active rebellion in Chechnya, has long championed the
    "territorial integrity" side of the equation. But the Kremlin's
    emphasis, at least regarding some of its neighbors, appears to be
    shifting.

    "If such precedents are possible [in the former Yugoslavia], they will
    also be precedents in the post-Soviet space," President Vladimir Putin
    told journalists Friday. "Why can Albanians in Kosovo have
    independence, but [Georgian breakaway republics] South Ossetia and
    Abkhazia can't? What's the difference?"

    When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, all of its 15 major republics
    gained their freedom and basked in the glow of global acceptance. But
    within some of those new states, smaller ethnic groups raised their
    own banners of rebellion. In the early 1990s, two "autonomous
    republics" in Georgia - Abkhazia and South Ossetia - defeated
    government forces with Russian assistance and established regimes that
    are effectively independent but stuck in legal limbo because they
    remain officially unrecognized, even by Moscow. The Russian-speaking
    province of Transdniestria, aided by the Russian 14th army, similarly
    broke away from the ethnically Romanian republic of Moldova. The
    Armenian-populated enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan fell
    under Armenian control after a savage war; and rebels in Russia's
    southern republic of Chechnya briefly won de facto independence in the
    late '90s after crushing Russian forces on the battlefield.

    In all of these cases, the international principle respecting the
    "territorial integrity" of existing states has so far trumped the
    yearning of small nationalities for their own statehood. Citing that
    rule, Moscow launched a brutal military campaign in 1999 that has
    since largely succeeded in reintegrating Chechnya as a province of
    Russia.

    But Russia's relations with Georgia, Moldova, and Azerbaijan have
    soured in recent years, as those countries have broken from Moscow's
    orbit and charted a more pro-West course. That, plus the precedents
    being set in the former Yugoslavia, has led some nationalist
    politicians in Moscow to demand the Kremlin salvage what influence it
    can in the region by granting recognition - or even membership in the
    Russian Federation - to some of those breakaway entities.

    Transdniestria has already signed an economic pact with Moscow that
    will allow the tiny but heavily-industrialized territory to sell its
    goods in Russia and eventually join the Russian ruble's currency
    zone. Also in the focus of Russia's changing policies are the
    breakaway Georgian republics of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

    "Russia needs to be more active in solving the problems of Abkhazia
    and South Ossetia," says Igor Panarin, a professor at the official
    Diplomatic Academy in Moscow, which trains Russian diplomats. "Both
    the people and governments of [these statelets] want to join Russia,
    and there's every legal reason for them to do so. Polls show the
    majority of Russians support this, too."

    Eduard Kokoity, president of the Georgian breakaway republic of South
    Ossetia, said last week he will ask Russia to annex his statelet,
    which has existed in legal limbo since driving out Georgian forces in
    a bitter civil war in the early '90s. "In the nearest future, we will
    submit documents to the Russian Constitutional Court proving the fact
    that South Ossetia joined the Russian Empire together with North
    Ossetia as an indivisible entity and never left Russia," Mr. Kokoity
    said.

    South Ossetia, with a population of about 70,000, is ethnically and
    geographically linked with the Russian Caucasus republic of North
    Ossetia. Experts say there is a local campaign, supported by Russian
    nationalists, to join the two territories into a new Moscow-ruled
    republic that would be named "Alania" - the ancient name of the
    Ossetian nation. "South Ossetia really wants to join Russia, and I
    wouldn't rule this out as a long-term prospect," says Suslov.

    Abkhazia, a sub-tropical Black Sea enclave, expelled its Georgian
    residents during the 1992-93 civil war, and now is home to about
    200,000 ethnic Abkhaz who eke out a living exporting fruit to Russia
    and welcoming the few Russian tourists that visit each year.

    Georgians cry foul, and complain the entire issue is a made-in-Moscow
    land grab. "South Ossetia and Abkhazia were created as a Bolshevik
    divide-and-rule device to control Georgia, and they are still being
    used that way," says Alexander Rondeli, president of the Strategic and
    International Studies Foundation, an independent think tank based in
    the Georgian capital, Tbilisi. "What is actually going on is the de
    facto annexation of these territories by Russia. Since Russia is
    strong, the Western powers let it do whatever it wants."

    Many Western experts argue that the process of dismantling the former
    Yugoslavia is a unique event, directly supervised by the UN and
    carried out with a maximum of democratic safeguards. If Russia acts
    alone in its region, it risks alienating the world and multiplying
    regional conflicts. "This is a double-edged sword," says Ariel Cohen,
    a senior researcher at the Heritage Foundation in Washington. "By
    recognizing Moscow-supported statelets, Russia would perpetuate
    frictions for decades to come. Post-Soviet borders should remain
    inviolate. This would save a lot of headaches, first of all for Russia
    itself."

    But for now, the mood in Moscow appears to be hardening. "We disagree
    with the concept that Kosovo is a unique case, because that runs
    counter to the norms of international law," Russian Deputy Foreign
    Minister Vladimir Titov warned in an interview with Vremya Novostei, a
    Russian newspaper, last week. "The resolution on Kosovo will create a
    precedent in international law that will later be applied to other
    frozen conflicts."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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