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20 years later, ex-USSR is a cracked mosaic

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  • 20 years later, ex-USSR is a cracked mosaic

    20 years later, ex-USSR is a cracked mosaic
    By JIM HEINTZ, Associated Press
    14 Aug 2011

    MOSCOW (AP) - First came Mikhail Gorbachev, who moved a monolithic
    Soviet Union toward reform. Then in August 1991, an ill-conceived coup
    attempt by clumsy and occasionally drunken men opened a crack that
    could not be closed.

    A few pieces of the empire fell off and floated away. Soon the rest of
    the mass collapsed.

    Triumphalists in the West saw the USSR's disintegration as the
    inevitable triumph of democracy, even as "the end of history." Others,
    as Russian leader Vladimir Putin, later put it, bemoaned the "greatest
    geopolitical catastrophe of the century."

    The shards of the Soviet Union lie somewhere between those extremes -
    a jumbled pile of countries, totaling one-sixth of the world's land
    mass, that are wildly different from each other and facing futures
    ranging from promising to troubling to anyone's guess. Islamic
    insurgencies threaten to explode into wide fighting, and two "frozen
    conflicts" appear nowhere near resolution.

    They range from Europe's poorest nation, Moldova, to Russia, which
    breeds tycoons of Pharaonic wealth. Some are genuine democracies;
    others are unconvincing, or cynical, imitations; Turkmenistan is an
    open dictatorship and Belarus and Uzbekistan effectively are the same.
    In the assessment of the Freedom House watchdog group, three of the 15
    former Soviet republics are considered free, seven not free and the
    other five somewhere in between.

    Russia is among the "not free," losing ground over the past decade. By
    far the largest former Soviet republic, the one with the most lavish
    treasure chest of natural resources and the only one to still have
    nuclear weapons, the path that Russia chooses is of key concern to the
    world - and the path is far from clear.

    In the first years after the Soviet Union's collapse, Russia's
    political scene seemed wide open, as reformers, opportunists and rabid
    nationalists entered the arena. In 1996, the presidential election
    competition was so intense that it forced a second round of voting,
    which Boris Yeltsin won with only 53 percent of the vote.

    But Putin's Russia, though nominally a democracy, has clamped a tight
    lid on any genuine opposition politics, except for the increasingly
    marginal Communist Party. Authorities routinely deny opposition groups
    permission to rally and police harshly break up unauthorized
    gatherings; election-law changes over the past decade threw up
    almost-insurmountable obstacles to independents and true opposition
    groups.

    President Dmitry Medvedev has repeatedly spoken of the need for
    reform, but as a weak president who attained office only because Putin
    could not run for another presidential term in 2008, his words have
    had little impact. Putin, currently prime minister, is widely expected
    to run for the presidency next year and would be certain to win. That
    would reinforce the so-called "managed democracy" system, which many
    observers believe could lead to catastrophe.

    "Russia throughout its history repeatedly saw political reforms
    launched only when it was already too late. And now the nation is
    again heading in the same direction," said Boris Makarenko of the
    independent Moscow-based Center for Political Technologies. "The
    government can't endlessly ignore society's opinion. If they attempt
    to do that, it could lead to the scenarios of 1917 or 1991."

    Russia's recent stability and its citizens' willingness to accept
    declining political freedoms are closely tied to the astonishing
    wealth that has flowered in the country since the Soviet collapse,
    hinging on world demand for its vast supplies of oil and natural gas.
    Even Russians who can't afford the multimillion-dollar apartments of
    central Moscow appear excited by watching from the sidelines.

    But the global economic crises of 2008 and 2011 starkly illustrated
    how vulnerable Russia is to drops in hydrocarbon prices. Prolonged
    economic stagnation or decline could rock the political system.

    "Without growth, it would be difficult for the government to 'buy off'
    discontent," University of California at Los Angeles professor Daniel
    Treisman said in a paper for the Carnegie Moscow Center.

    Russia also is plagued by an Islamic insurgency in its Caucasus
    provinces, an offshoot of the two post-Soviet wars with Chechen
    separatists. The violence periodically spreads deep into the
    heartland, as in January when a suicide bomber killed 36 people at
    Moscow's largest airport.

    Kazakhstan, smaller than Russia but still larger than all of Europe,
    has also thrived on its gas reserves and other natural resources. And
    its prospects for democracy are even more doubtful than Russia's.
    Nursultan Nazarbayev, who has led the country since the Soviet
    collapse, holds unchallenged power and his party occupies every seat
    in the national legislature. Yet Nazarbayev strikes a more progressive
    posture than have Russia's leaders, eagerly giving up the nuclear
    weapons that Kazakhstan inherited from the Soviet Union and promoting
    ethnic and religious tolerance.

    However, neighboring Kyrgyzstan remains a focus of worry because of
    violent animosity between ethnic groups, which exploded last year in
    pogroms in the south that killed hundreds. Both the United States and
    Russia have air bases in the country and stability there is a key
    concern for both Moscow and Washington.

    Kyrgyzstan's moment of truth may come in national elections in
    October, showing whether the country can return to the democratic path
    it bloodily veered away from in recent years. Once regarded as the
    region's "island of democracy," Kyrgyzstan since 2005 plunged into two
    violent overthrows of power.

    Two other former Soviet states' moves toward democracy and the West
    deteriorated but have not definitively collapsed.

    Ukraine, where massive protests in 2004 ushered in a reformist
    Western-leaning pro-NATO government, almost immediately devolved into
    factional jealousies that effectively paralyzed the country. Voters
    threw out that regime last year in favor of a Russia-friendly
    president, who is under wide criticism from the West for politically
    motivated prosecutions and pressure on independent news media. Ukraine
    meanwhile has acquired international notoriety for frequent brawls in
    parliament, and whether the country ultimately tilts West or East
    remains a question.

    Georgia, whose 2003 "Rose Revolution" led the way for the region's
    regime-changing mass protests, was driving firmly toward NATO and
    European Union membership under reformist President Mikhail
    Saakashvili. But the momentum petered out after Georgia's five-day war
    with Russia in 2008, which both the Kremlin and many Georgians blame
    on Saakashvili's impetuosity.

    The two Georgian regions that split off in the war, South Ossetia and
    Abkhazia, remain potential flashpoints, with Georgia alleging they are
    occupied territory used as staging points for Russian terrorist
    incursions.

    Not far from Georgia lies another obdurate problem - Nagorno-Karabakh.
    This Luxembourg-sized territory, deep inside Azerbaijan, has been
    controlled by Armenian soldiers and ethnic Armenian forces since a
    1994 cease-fire ended separatist fighting. More than a decade of
    international mediation has brought no apparent move toward
    resolution, and both sides frequently report small clashes across the
    no-man's-land that separates them. A renewal of full-scale fighting
    could shake European markets because of the key oil pipeline that
    passes through Azerbaijan en route to the West.

    Less volatile, but equally stagnant, is the status of Transdniester, a
    separatist sliver of Moldova reinforced by Russian troops.

    At one extreme of the post-Soviet experience lie Estonia, Latvia and
    Lithuania. The first to leave when the USSR was disintegrating, these
    three small countries have taken a firmly Westward course, all joining
    NATO and the EU.

    At the other stand authoritarian Uzbekistan, Belarus and Turkmenistan.
    No change appears even remotely likely in Uzbekistan until strongman
    leader Islam Karimov leaves office. Belarus' President Alexander
    Lukashenko, who has suppressed opposition and independent media,
    currently faces the biggest threats to his 17-year rule as the
    Soviet-style command economy collapses.

    Turkmenistan, where huge natural gas revenues have transformed the
    once-dismal capital into a shiny desert showpiece resembling Las
    Vegas, has thrown off much of the personality cult engendered by the
    late eccentric leader Saparmurat Niyazov, who had banned gold teeth
    and ballet, but it remains a single-party state. However, Niyazov's
    successor has invited exiled opposition leaders to return to take part
    in next year's elections in what may be a hesitant step toward
    openness.

    The differing fates and prospects of the countries add up to a
    historical irony: Whereas the Soviet Union sought to spread a single
    ideology throughout the world, its former territory is now as varied
    as the world itself.

    Associated Press writer Vladimir Isachenov in Moscow contributed to this story.

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