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  • Making Their Votes Count

    MAKING THEIR VOTES COUNT
    By Sergei Markedonov

    Russia Profile, Russia
    Oct 3 2006

    Breakaway Republics Start a New Round of Referendums

    Fifteen years after the "parade of sovereignties" that was the end
    of the Soviet Union, a new march is beginning in the Eurasian space.

    This time it is a "parade of referendums" being held by the
    unrecognized republics that form a kind of parallel Commonwealth of
    Independent States.

    On September 17, the breakaway Moldovan region of Transdnestr
    held a referendum that included two questions. The first was: "Do
    you support the course toward independence of the Transdnestrian
    Moldovan Republic and the subsequent free joining of Transdnestr to
    the Russian Federation?"; the second was "Do reject the independence
    of the Transdnestrian Moldovan Republic with the subsequent entry of
    Transdnestr into the Republic of Moldova?"

    On November 12, South Ossetia will hold a referendum on its
    independence from Georgia. The South Ossetian vote will be held
    simultaneously with presidential elections in the unrecognized
    republic. This is no coincidence: President Eduard Kokoity is trying
    to gain additional legitimacy by asking people to identify him
    as the force behind independence. It appears that definitions of
    "legitimacy" are being used to justify the political situation in
    unrecognized republics.

    Legitimacy, however, is not the same as recognition from the
    international community. Quite the opposite - the wave of referendums
    is unacknowledged by influential international organizations. Terry
    Davis, the Secretary General of the Council of Europe, expressed
    doubt as to whether the results of the South Ossetian referendum will
    be recognized at all. He added that the South Ossetian authorities
    should start talks with Georgia aimed at finding a peaceful solution.

    "The secessionist authorities of the South Ossetian region of Georgia
    are wasting time and effort on the organization of a referendum on
    independence in November," he said

    In an interview with Kommersant-Ukraina, EU Special Representative to
    Moldova Adriaan Jacobovits de Szeged, said that international law made
    Transdnestrian secession an impossibility. "Separating Transdnestr
    can happen only if agreement is reached with Moldova," he said.

    But if legitimacy is understood as the local population accepting
    the authorities as "their own," then legitimacy exists, even if it
    is unrecognized. In South Ossetia, like the other de facto states,
    authorities that maintain no ties with the recognized "mother
    state" are seen as "ours." Thus, this fall will likely see another
    manifestation of unrecognized legitimacy. In addition to the previously
    mentioned referendums, Nagorno-Karabakh will hold a vote in December
    on a project for formulating a Basic Law that will govern the region's
    relationship with Azerbaijan. The question of independence for the
    region and its status is seen as closed for further discussion. The
    region's foreign minister, Georgy Petrosyan, said: "Independence for
    Nagorno- Karabakh is of the highest value to the republic's people
    and was supported by a popular referendum on state independence of
    December 10, 1991."

    Virtually all the unrecognized post-Soviet republics held referendums
    in the early 1990s. On January 19, 1992, South Ossetia approved a
    referendum to secede from Georgia and to join Russia. Transdnestr
    has already held six referendums before Sept. 17, including votes to
    approve a Transdnestrian Constitution and to confirm the republic's
    existence.

    The current "parade of referendums" seems justified on three grounds.

    First, as a rule, the plebiscites of the early 1990s took place
    against a backdrop of armed conflict between the breakaway territories
    and their "mother countries." In this sense, they enjoy much less
    legitimacy than equivalent votes during peacetime. Fifteen years
    later, the de facto states have demonstrated their viability not
    only to the countries of which they are part, but also to the whole
    world. Transdnestr, Abkhazia, and Nagorno-Karabakh all have territory
    under their control and their own legal structures.

    Even among these areas, however, South Ossetia is a special case. The
    region is not ethnically homogeneous and the capital, Tskhinvali,
    is cut off from North Ossetia - and therefore from Russia - by the
    "Liakhvsky corridor," a strip of Georgian villages along the river of
    the same name. Nevertheless, polls and other sociological research
    - including some conducted in 2003 by the John F. Kennedy School
    of Government at Harvard University - among South Ossetians aged
    20-27 show that support for Georgian jurisdiction is zero. Thus,
    the new wave of referendums is a test of viability and evidence of
    the sustainability of unrecognized statehood.

    The second justification for the referendums is as a demonstration
    of the foreign-policy priorities of the unrecognized territories,
    although this rule will be observed differently in each case. In
    Transdnestr and South Ossetia, the referendums will serve as a
    strategic choice in Russia's favor, while in Nagorno-Karabakh the
    vote on the constitution is primarily about territorial and political
    institutionalization. Many in the region hope that deciding on the
    final arbiter of the state's viability - the Constitution - will
    significantly hasten international recognition of the region.

    Third and finally, the current wave of plebiscites is a reaction to
    the Balkan example of ethnic self-determination.

    Although both the United States and the European Union have said that
    the cases of Montenegro and Kosovo are unique and should not be used as
    templates for blind political copying, the former Soviet unrecognized
    states are adopting political decisions aimed at acquiring additional
    legitimacy and, finally, at becoming de jure independent based on
    the concept of ethnic self-determination.A struggle for international
    recognition based on the Balkan precedents will take place, regardless
    of the genuinely significant differences between Montenegro and Kosovo
    and the problems of Nagorno-Karabakh, Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

    As the largest and most influential state in the post-Soviet
    space, Russia faces the problem of how to act in the face of this
    "Balkanization." Moscow has two basic options - either continue
    to support the status quo, hoping to prolong this state of affairs
    indefinitely, or, if Kosovo is recognized, to attempt to escalate the
    situation by recognizing Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Nagorno Karabakh
    and Transdnestr as a "symmetrical measure."

    By choosing to defend the status quo, Russia would be saying,
    in essence, that it will not carry out the political will of these
    regions. The wishes of the de facto states are obvious, and even evoke
    some political sympathies, but identifying their political interests
    with those of Russia would be incorrect. Russia is a major player on a
    global scale and needs to calculate the best use of its resources and
    its opportunities for politicking regarding the unrecognized states.

    Obviously, international recognition of Transdnestr, Abkhazia or South
    Ossetia should not just mean recognition by Russia. This would not be
    satisfactory for the breakaway republics and risks the possibility
    of the "Balkanization" of Russia itself. Russia needs to look for
    allies in the changing configuration of the post-Soviet space. But
    for this it first needs coherent arguments as to why it should take
    up the case of the unrecognized republics, as well as clear criteria
    to present to the international community as a whole.

    The first criterion should be the countries' viability - both in terms
    of the strength of their political structures and their territorial
    stability. Nagorno-Karabakh and Transdnestr, for example, are states
    that already exist, and for this reason their peaceful reintegration
    into their former "mother countries" is an impossibility.

    The second criterion could be the ability of the mother countries
    to control the "breakaway territory" in question by means other
    than wholesale deportation or ethnic cleansing. In other words,
    reintegration should be considered impossible if it will lead to
    subsequent military conflict. A third criterion could be evidence
    of democratic procedures in the unrecognized regions. All of these
    states have been through several electoral cycles, and leaders have
    been changed by popular vote - an extremely difficult procedure for
    the post-Soviet space and something that cannot be said about many
    recognized post-Soviet states.

    In addition to these criteria, which are focused on the public
    political space, dialogue must be carried out behind the scenes. This
    requires other arguments and other issues, including the stability of
    the Caucasus region as a whole and the fate of the regions' valuable
    energy resources and energy transport systems. But this kind of
    backstairs horse-trading should be supplemented by active public
    measures, since influencing the opinion of Brussels, Washington,
    and individual EU capitals in a particular direction also relies on
    forming expert and public opinion in the countries in question. This
    in turn requires speaking to the West in language it understands -
    the language of human rights, ethnic minority rights, guarantees for
    minority languages, and the inadmissibility of military solutions.

    Last, but certainly not least, recognition of the unrecognized states
    is not the same as their inclusion into Russia. These two ideas must
    be clearly separated. Russia will not fight alongside separatists
    in the Galsk region of Abkhazia or the villages of Tamarasheni and
    Kekhvi in South Ossetia, or end up with Transdnestr as a second
    exclave alongside Kaliningrad - especially given that in all these
    cases the local elites are certainly not dreaming about the arrival
    of Russian prosecutors or tame Kremlin governors.

    Only by defining such clear criteria, calculating available resources,
    and undertaking serious informational and diplomatic efforts can
    Russia attempt to find a final solution to the problem of unrecognized
    territories. The most important thing to remember in this process is
    that is should be guided not by abstract humanism, or by the interests
    of the self-proclaimed elites, but by Russian national self-interest.

    Sergei Markedonov is head of the international relations department
    of the Institute of Political and Military Analysis in Moscow. He
    contributed this comment to Russia Profile.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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