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    THE RUSSIAN WORLD: A PEACEKEEPING ANNIVERSARY AND THE SEARCH FOR A FORMULA FOR A FINAL SETTLEMENT

    Politkom.ru
    July 30 2012
    Russia

    by Sergey Markedonov, Visiting Fellow at the Centre for Strategic
    and International Studies, Washington, D.C.,

    The day 28 July 2012 marked 20 years since the start of the
    peacekeeping operation that ended the bloodshed on the Dniester in
    1992. Today serving in the joint peacekeeping forces are 402 Russian
    troops, 492 troops from the Dniester Region, and 355 Moldovan troops,
    as well as 10 military observers from Ukraine, which along with Russia
    (beginning in 1997) acts as a country guaranteeing peace and security
    in the conflict zone. But the attitude of the parties in conflict
    towards the peacekeeping operation differs diametrically...

    Allow me to remind you in brief of the basic outline of the events
    of 20 years ago. On 19-21 June 1992, the armed phase of the conflict
    between the Republic of Moldova (which after the dissolution of the
    USSR had received international recognition) and the unrecognized
    Dniester Moldovan Republic (PMR) reached its peak. There was the battle
    for Bendery, and Moldovan regular units stormed the city executive
    committee defended by the Dniester people. Russian volunteers and the
    servicemen of the 14th Army helped the PMR. Then and later on this
    made it possible to speak of the "Kremlin's hand" in the process of
    the escalation of the conflict, although at that time Moscow was not
    so much directing as not hindering the initiatives "on site." The
    failure of the attack on Bendery (as well as the protests of the
    Moldovan oppositionists against civil war) forced Chisinau to see
    a way out of the impasse that had come about. In Moscow on 21 July
    1992, Russian Federation President Boris Yeltsin and President of the
    Republic of Moldova Mircea Snegur, in the presence of Igor Smirnov,
    the leader of the PMR, signed the agreement "On the Principles
    of Settlement of the Armed Conflict in the Dniester Region of the
    Republic of Moldova." Created in accordance with this document were
    trilateral peacekeeping forces that included representatives of the
    parties in conflict and Russia. The United Control Commission (OKK),
    which was headed by cochairmen from the Russian Federation, Moldova,
    and the PMR, was created on 27 July 1992. And finally, on 28 July the
    OKK adopted the decision to deploy peacekeepers in the security zone
    that had been created to separate the parties.

    Since that time a new stage has begun in the Moldovan-Dniester Region
    conflict, one that has not ended to this day. The essence of this
    stage is the search for a formula for a final peace settlement. Today,
    20 years since the end of the armed conflict on the Dniester, serving
    in the joint peacekeeping forces are 402 Russian troops, 492 troops
    from the Dniester Region, and 355 Moldovan troops, as well as 10
    military observers from Ukraine, which along with Russia (beginning
    in 1997) acts as a country guaranteeing peace and security in the
    conflict zone. But the attitude of the parties in conflict towards the
    peacekeeping operation differs diametrically. On the eve of the 20th
    anniversary from the moment it started, PMR President Yevgeniy Shevchuk
    signed an edict declaring 28 July Peacekeeper Day. In addition to that,
    a bridge across the Dniester in the region of Bendery was given the
    special name Peacekeepers of Russia Bridge. The Moldovan approach,
    in contrast, proceeds from the idea that in 2012 the peacekeeping
    operation that started 20 years ago from this day does not correspond
    to the new realities. Official Chisinau believes that it would be
    wise to transform the present mission (where Russia dominates) into
    a civilian format with an international mandate. The Russian side,
    however, is in no hurry to bid farewell to its dominant position. In
    the opinion of Russian Federation Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs
    Grigoriy Karasin, the operation in the Dniester Region can be
    considered the "most effective in all European space."

    The Moldovan-Dniester Region conflict differs fundamentally from
    other post-Soviet ethno-political confrontations. In the first
    place, the ethnic composition of the conflict on the Dniester is more
    complicated than in Abkhazia, South Osseti a, or Nagornyy Karabakh. On
    the one hand, even the name of the PMR has the word "Moldovan," and
    the Moldovan language (based on Cyrillic) is one of the three state
    languages (together with Ukrainian and Russian). On the other hand,
    on the right bank of the Dniester, in the Republic of Moldova, the
    size of the Russian population based on absolute indicators (200,300
    people) without counting the percentage correlation of different ethnic
    groups is greater than the number of Russians in the Dniester Region
    (168,316). In that way, the ethnic component of the conflict is not
    prominent here. Much more important is the struggle for political
    self-identification.

    In the second place, the armed phase of the conflict on the Dniester
    compared with Abkhazia or Nagornyy Karabakh was less intense. It
    was not accompanied by ethnic purges and the relocation of masses
    of refugees.

    In the third place, unlike the two former autonomous bodies of Georgia,
    the Russian Federation does not have a direct border with the PMR. The
    Dniester Region borders on Ukraine, which often has foreign policy
    goals, tasks, and priorities that differ from Russia's. And these
    differences have been manifested more than once. Take just the story
    of 2006 when Kiev in effect stood in solidarity with Chisinau in its
    policy of economic pressure on the PMR by means of customs regulation
    measures.

    In the fourth place, the Moldovan-Dniester Region conflict is the only
    one of the post-Soviet confrontations that directly abuts the borders
    of NATO and the European Union. Moldova borders Romania (which is a
    member of both the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the European
    Union), and the idea of the unification of these two states is being
    actively discussed, although it is not in fact on their actual agenda.

    Another neighbour of the PMR, Ukraine, also has a common border with
    several NATO and European Union member countries (Romania, Hungary,
    Slovakia, and Poland). That is also a source of the special interest
    of the European Union, its main sponsor Germany, and Europe's main
    military partner the United States in a final settlement of the
    Moldovan-Dniester Region conflict. Of course not under abstract
    but under advantageous conditions. Unfortunately, that does not
    mean achieving a formula that would suit the two clashing parties,
    but minimizing Russian influence. Not everyone but many people in
    the West see this influence itself as the restoration of the Soviet
    Union in a soft form or of "Russian imperial influence," as well as
    an important prerequisite for strengthening authoritarian tendencies
    inside the Russian Federation. Ignored in the process is the important
    fact that all the peacekeeping operations with Russian participation
    began in the 1990s (in South Ossetia and the Dniester Region in 1992,
    in Abkhazia in 1994, and in Tajikistan in November 1993 already
    during the civil war). That is to say, at a time when Russia was
    perceived as an example for conducting democratic reforms and market
    transformations both in the West and in Eurasia. And despite that,
    back in May of 1995 (in other words, before any "Putin vertical
    hierarchy"), the OSCE representative, Hungarian diplomat Istvan
    Dyarmati, was insisting on expanding this organization's peacekeeping
    mandate and replacing the peacekeeping operation with the kind of
    format where an appreciable role would be given to the structure that
    he represented at that moment. Let us also not forget that frequently
    (deliberately or not), the American and European diplomats mix up
    the question of a peacekeeping operation with the problem of Russia's
    military presence on the territory of the PMR (from the formal legal
    standpoint on Moldova's territory). But it is, of course, a matter
    of the remnants of the 14th Army and military storehouses in Kolbasnya.

    In the meantime, these two problems are of a different nature and
    mechanically mixing them up can only make the peace process more
    complicated and confuse it.

    And the l ast topic. During the settlement of the Moldovan-Dniester
    Region conflict, for many years (1994-2003) only on the Dniester
    were the parties in conflict discussing the conditions for possible
    reintegration rather than the premises for the impossibility of living
    together. And only after the failure of the initiative with the signing
    of the Memorandum "On the Fundamental Principles of the State System
    of a United State" (known as the plan of Dmitriy Kozak, who at that
    moment was the first deputy head of the Russian President's Staff)
    in 2003 did Moldova and the PMR go their separate ways. Allow me to
    mention in passing that if those same American diplomats had pictured
    this situation better and they had not tried to minimize Russian
    influence in Eurasia, as a result a single federative Moldova would
    exist today, and Russia could have avoided that drastic anti-Western
    tilt in its policy that was taken after 2003.

    And although in recent months, the negotiating process between Chisinau
    and Tiraspol was markedly stepped up, it does not seem possible
    to speak of achieving a compromise acceptable to both parties. To
    illustrate, based on the outcome of the recent talks in the 5+2
    format in Vienna (the two conflicting sides plus an intermediary,
    observers, and guarantors), the Dniester Region President Yevgeniy
    Shevchuk announced at his press conference: "Questions of status and a
    settlement agreement are not being discussed now. It is premature. We
    are discussing questions of social-economic cooperation and resolution
    of the problems built up in the past." After the former speaker of
    the Supreme Soviet of the unrecognized republic Yevgeniy Shevchuk
    scored the victory in the second round of the presidential election
    in the PMR in December 2011, there were both phobias and excessive
    expectations in Russia and in the West regarding the prospects of the
    peace process and settlement of the conflict. During the presidential
    campaign, the Kremlin supported Shevchuk's opponent Anatoliy Kaminskiy,
    fearing that "positive reputation" that was created in certain Western
    mass media outlets and in expert circles for this politician. But
    this reputation itself was based on myths of many years surrounding
    the Dniester Region. And the most important one of them is the idea
    of the unrecognized republic on the Dniester as a kind of "Communist
    Vendee" headed always by Igor Smirnov, who was at times compared with
    Lukashenka and at times with other authoritarian leaders (each to his
    own taste). An ordinary personification of Dniester Region politics
    occurred where the PMR's status as a political actor was denied (or
    to be more succinct, identified with the Kremlin's will), while the
    difficulties of the peace process were linked with the personality
    of the uncomfortable and ambitious Smirnov. But last year the PMR
    got a new leader. However, no decisive "breakthrough" in resolving
    the conflict is foreseen at this point. In this context one should
    also mention a certain "warming" in Moscow's attitude towards Shevchuk.

    Evidence of this is the allocation of an instalment of 500 million
    roubles. But that is not the crucial problem. Unlike Smirnov, Shevchuk
    is a man and a politician who grew up and was formed not in the USSR
    but in conditions of the PMR. If there were no PMR, his political
    career would perhaps not have even begun at all. It was formed
    specifically in conditions of unrecognized statehood and disputed
    sovereignty. To risk it for the sake of the illusory prospects of
    universal world recognition is, of course, possible but hard. The
    advantages and possible acquisitions from radical concessions are
    not obvious.

    [translated from Russian]




    From: A. Papazian
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