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  • The Crimean Knot

    THE CRIMEAN KNOT

    Russia in Global Affairs (English)
    June 10, 2014 Tuesday 5:00 AM EST

    Jun 07, 2014 Russia in Global Affairs (English):http://eng.globalaffairs.ru

    When the Ukrainian crisis and standoff in Kiev's Independence Square
    peaked in early 2014, not a single political expert in Crimea, Kiev,
    Moscow, or Washington could have predicted that in a mere six to
    eight weeks events would unfold as they did. Unlike Transdniestria,
    Abkhazia, or South Ossetia, Crimea was not a long-festering conflict
    zone. Crimean problems were dealt with through the political
    process with a consensus of main actors who had ideas regarding the
    configuration of post-Soviet borders. And yet Crimea turned out to
    be the pivot of instability where fundamental geopolitical shifts
    took place. Although the root causes of those shifts belong to the
    realm of global politics and to the relationship between Russia and
    the West, the situation in Crimea is crucial to understanding why
    Russian President Vladimir Putin's strategy has proven for the most
    part to be realistic.

    HOW THE CRIMEAN KNOT WAS TIED

    When Ukraine became an independent country after the collapse of
    the Soviet Union in 1991, the Crimean peninsula was in a precarious
    position. In 1952, Soviet leader Nikita Krushchev had taken the region
    away from the Russian Soviet Socialist Federative Republic and handed
    it to Ukraine. In 1991, over 60% of Crimea's two million inhabitants
    were ethnic Russians. Yet a majority of Ukrainians living in Crimea
    were Russian speakers who identified more with Russian culture
    than Ukrainian. Although a majority of Crimeans favored the idea of
    Ukrainian independence (not an overwhelming majority, just slightly
    more than 50%, as the referendum on 1 December 1991 clearly showed),
    Crimean society was cautious about some trends in the new Ukrainian
    state. For instance, the decision to make Ukrainian the only official
    language and plans to sever economic and cultural ties with Russia
    (on the pretext of overcoming dependence) expressed by a number of
    Ukrainian politicians at the time.

    Therefore, it is not surprising that in January 1991, in the last
    months of the Soviet Union, one and half million people living in
    Crimea, or 90% of its population, voted to restore Crimean autonomy
    in a referendum held by the Crimean Communist authorities.

    With the breakup of the Soviet Union, a powerful movement gained
    momentum in Crimea whose goal was to expand the autonomy's rights
    and to reintegrate Ukraine with Russia within the CIS. A number
    of local parties backed that movement, including the Communists,
    the Republicans, and various Russian organizations. In May 1992,
    the Republic of Crimea adopted a Constitution that stipulated for
    a large degree of regional independence. The Rossiya election bloc
    won the 1994 elections. Its leader, Yuri Meshkov, had become Crimea's
    president shortly before the elections. But his erratic activities and
    pro-integration and pro-Russian rhetoric posed quite a few problems
    for Kiev.

    The central authorities in Simferopol and Kiev sorted things out
    amid soaring tensions between Russia and Ukraine over the future of
    the former Soviet Black Sea Fleet. At first, under CIS agreements
    it was implied that control of the 'strategic forces' (and Russia
    certainly regarded the Black Sea Fleet as strategic) would be decided
    in a special way. However, it soon emerged that Ukraine and Russia
    understood the term 'strategic forces' differently. The Ukrainian
    Defense Ministry made a haphazard attempt to take over the Black Sea
    Fleet only to run into strong resistance from the Fleet's commander
    Admiral Igor Kasatonov. In fact, Kasatonov forced Russian President
    Boris Yeltsin to intervene and a protracted process began to separate
    the Black Sea Fleet, which was extremely complex and fraught with
    surprises. For Ukraine, the Crimean issue was closely linked with the
    Black Sea Fleet, because 'Crimean separatism' was not an issue on its
    own, but it gained momentum in combination with potential Russian
    intervention. Throughout the 1990s, the Kremlin showed very little
    interest in Crimea. Major territorial problems in the Caucasus and
    internal political struggles limited Russia's opportunities to press
    for its interests on the Black Sea.

    The repatriation of the Crimean Tatars and related issues were
    the third group of problems to emerge in Crimea shortly before and
    just after the breakup of the Soviet Union. Josef Stalin deported
    the Crimean Tatars from the peninsula in 1944 on charges of mass
    collaboration with the Nazis during World War II. Unlike other
    'deported peoples' the Crimean Tatars were not exonerated under
    Khrushchev because of foreign political and defense considerations.

    Exoneration implied the return of the Crimean Tatars to their ancestral
    homeland. Soviet leaders were reluctant to allow the return of the
    Crimean Tatars, fearing complications with Turkey, which had joined
    NATO in 1952. The Caribbean crisis (provoked in part by the deployment
    of U.S. nuclear weapons in Turkey) put the issue of Crimean Tatar
    repatriation on the back burner. The issue was brought up again as
    late as at the end of the 1980s, the beginning of perestroika.

    At that time Crimean society was not prepared to welcome back as many
    as 270,000 people who were very different culturally and mentally from
    the majority of the peninsula's population. Repatriation continued
    on a massive scale in the wake of the Soviet collapse, which bred
    immeasurable problems and sparked quite a few conflicts stemming from
    political and socio-economic reasons.

    Once repatriation began, the Crimean Tatar political movement
    grew into a well-organized and effective force that had support
    from liberals inside the Soviet Union and from the West. In 1991,
    the Crimean Tatars set up a national parliament (the Kurultai) and
    government (the Mejlis) under Mustafa Dzhemilev, a former dissident
    who wielded a great deal of authority with the Crimean Tatars,
    the West, and Turkey. From the outset the Mejlis launched a crusade
    under the banner of self-determination for the Crimean Tatars and
    sought to establish a political regime that would grant the Crimean
    Tatars special status as Crimea's indigenous and titular nation. An
    immediate surge in tensions followed between the Crimean Tatars,
    the Slavic majority, and the local authorities over such sensitive
    issues as land, property rights, and jobs.

    The initial repatriation period was accompanied by a number of
    serious conflicts. Tensions peaked in 1995 when there was a real
    possibility of widespread clashes and a major interethnic standoff
    in eastern Crimea. Ukraine's central television network successfully
    used the Crimean Tatar movement as a counter-balance to so-called
    'pro-Russian separatism.'

    The Kiev-Simferopol political conflict, problems over the presence
    of the Black Sea Fleet, and the repatriation of the Crimean Tatars
    were the three major components of an intricate Crimean knot that
    none of the successive Ukrainian governments managed to untie.

    THE 'UKRAINIAN ORDER' IN THE MAKING

    Overburdened by complicated problems in the 1990s, Crimea managed to
    avoid an armed conflict like those in many surrounding territories,
    such as Transdniestria and Nagorno-Karabakh. There are several reasons
    for this.

    Notably, all key participants in the events were aware of the
    consequences of uncontrollable processes, so they preferred
    negotiations. The region had no history of interethnic strife except
    for the problem of the Crimean Tatars (but they accounted for a small
    percentage of the population). Restoring the interethnic autonomy
    proved an effective mechanism for settling disputes. Moreover, Russia
    and Ukraine were busy with post-Soviet reforms and searching for
    ways to resolve economic problems, which certainly distracted them
    from territorial issues and conflict (for instance, Yeltsin easily
    recognized the territorial integrity of Ukraine). In this sense,
    Crimea could easily be considered a positive example of a civilized
    (although very nervous) post-Soviet divorce. The era of Ukrainian
    President Leonid Kuchma (1994-2004) saw a more or less successful
    solution to the 'Crimean issue.'

    Firstly, that was the time when a basis was created for establishing
    the 'Ukrainian order' in Crimea. In 1997, Russia and Ukraine signed
    what was sometimes informally referred to as the 'Big Treaty.' Russia
    kept its naval base in Sevastopol; but under amendments to the
    Ukrainian Constitution, Russia could only lease the base until 2017.

    Ukraine received part of the former Soviet Union's Black Sea Fleet
    and had the opportunity to create its own small naval force. Most
    importantly, Ukraine preserved its sovereignty over the entire
    territory of the Crimean peninsula and Russia paid for its contingent
    by extending Ukraine discounts on Russian gas.

    In March 1995, Ukrainian secret services took advantage of an internal
    political crisis in Crimea to oust President Meshkov and establish
    full control over the region. That process was described as 'Crimea's
    induction into Ukraine's legal space.' Relying on sharp disagreements
    inside the criminalized local elite, the Ukrainian authorities promptly
    enforced crucial decisions. In the second phase (starting in 1998),
    Kuchma, after winning a second term, eliminated criminal clans in
    Crimea and formalized a limited autonomy regime. Throughout that period
    the Ukrainian government maintained control of the local authorities,
    first by using the conflict between the head of Crimea's legislature
    Leonid Grach and the head of government Sergei Kunitsin.

    Later Kuchma supported the duo of Kunitsin and the new speaker of
    the regional parliament Boris Deich.

    Kuchma handled the problem of the Crimean Tatars with relative
    success. Over the previous decade, the repatriation of the 270,000
    Crimean Tatars was essentially completed. Those who remained in exile,
    mostly in Uzbekistan, did so for various personal reasons. An economic
    rebound at the end of the 1990s somewhat eased social tensions among
    the returnees. In 1999, Kiev agreed to a partial legalization of
    local self-government for the Crimean Tatars. After a series of mass
    demonstrations organized by the Mejlis, the Ukrainian government
    created a special council made up of Crimean Tatar representatives
    under the Ukrainian president. All Mejlis members took seats on that
    council. Crimean Tatars had begun infiltrating federal agencies on
    a massive scale and the process of forming ethnic bureaucracy and
    ethnic bourgeoisie was proceeding in full swing.

    Crimea's first decade as part of an independent Ukraine was
    economically bleak as local industries closed (with the exception of
    chemical giants in northern Crimea, companies that mined construction
    materials, and some shipbuilding facilities (in Kerch)). The entire
    military-industrial complex, including electronics, as well as TV
    manufacturing and a greater part of shipbuilding, failed to survive the
    economic devastation of the 1990s. The same was true of agriculture,
    whose export potential was reduced to zero. All former Soviet republics
    were experiencing the same kind of problems, so Crimea's economic
    collapse had no noticeable political effects.

    The local population managed to adjust to the new capitalist realities
    and only a relatively small percent of local residents emigrated. The
    repatriation of the Crimean Tatars contributed to population growth
    throughout the 1990s and the early 2000s. In time, demand for labor
    resources grew in the tourist and recreation industry, and in the
    construction sector. Small and mid-sized businesses were created. The
    Ukrainian economy stabilized and grew in the late 1990s and early
    2000s, giving rise to some social optimism, while the relatively mild
    policy of Ukrainization was neither wholly rejected nor resisted.

    The ethnic makeup of Crimea's new population of nearly two million
    was as follows: 58% were ethnic Russians (a unique parameter for
    Ukraine), 24% consisted of Ukrainians (mostly Russian-speaking and
    who considered themselves culturally closer to Russia), and 12% were
    made up of Crimean Tatars, whose role in the political affairs of
    the peninsula, by virtue of their historically greater passionarity,
    was proportionately larger than their share of the population.

    Nevertheless, despite the explosive potential of this ethnic
    'cocktail,' Crimea managed to avoid large-scale interethnic conflicts.

    Ukraine's Orange Revolution shattered that fragile idyll. Overall,
    Crimea did not support the first series of protests in Kiev at the
    end of 2004 and early 2005. In fact, Crimea refused to recognize
    the newly-elected president Viktor Yushchenko. The Party of Regions
    won local parliamentary elections and Crimea, just like a number of
    other regions and cities in southeastern Ukraine, remained under the
    control of the Party of Regions practically throughout Yushchenko's
    presidency. Such a state of affairs was largely a result of political
    reform carried out at the beginning of 2005, which stripped the
    central authorities of many opportunities to influence local
    situations effectively. Indeed, all of Crimea's hopes were pinned
    on Viktor Yanukovich, the presidential candidate from the Party of
    Regions who represented the interests of Ukraine's Russian-speaking
    industrial southeast. Crimea, along with the Donbass coal-mining
    region, was the core of Yanukovich's support (with more than 70%
    of the electorate ready to vote for him).

    During that time other political forces opposed to Kiev were gaining
    strength, including Russian groups and organizations. Some of the
    more popular were the Russian Community of Crimea (led by Sergei
    Tsekov), the movement Proryv (Breakthrough), and Russian Unity (led
    by Sergei Aksyonov). All these organizations were strongly critical
    of Ukrainization, in particular the policy of making into heroes the
    leaders of Ukrainian nationalism in the mid-twentieth century. Along
    with a general atmosphere of resistance to radical nationalist forces
    in Ukraine, a new challenge contributed to the fresh surge in activity
    of Russian organizations after the lull in the second half of the 1990s
    and early 2000s. That challenge came from the Crimean Tatar movement.

    Kuchma's land reform in the mid-2000s fueled widespread arbitrary
    seizures of land by Crimean Tatars, who had originally been barred
    from taking part in the privatization of assets that once belonged to
    former Soviet farm cooperatives and state-run farms. The first massive
    protests in Kiev's Independence Square in the mid-2000s weakened both
    the central and local authorities to the extent that Crimean Tatar
    activist organizations were able to seize thousands of hectares of land
    to build private homes, mostly around large cities and on the southern
    coast of Crimea. This Mejlis-led squatting campaign peaked in 2006,
    provoking numerous conflicts and explosive situations. The issue of
    legalizing the land seized during that period remains unresolved.

    The influence of political Islam was another important trend among
    the Crimean Tatars. The Crimean Muslim Board, like the overwhelming
    majority of Muslim communities, traditionally remained under
    the control of the Mejlis, a nationalist and secular pro-Western
    organization. However, the mid-2000s saw the rise and growth of
    so-called 'independent' communities, often under the influence of
    foreign Islamic centers (currently over 10% of all communities are
    independent). Islamic sentiment was present in the Crimean Tatar
    movement much earlier, but in the second half of the 2000s a political
    split occurred between the Mejlis and various Islamic groups. The
    international party Hizb-ut-Tahrir increased its activities in the
    region. Additionally, some local Wahhabi organizations (such as Sebat)
    emerged. All of those parties and groups were critical of the Mejlis
    for not paying proper attention to traditions and for caring more
    about itself than the people. This growing influence of Islamists on
    the Crimean Tatar ummah aroused deep concern among the Slavic majority
    on the peninsula.

    During Yushchenko's presidency the overly-friendly rhetoric towards
    Russia during Kuchma's administration gave way to a noticeable cooling
    in relations between Russia and Ukraine. Yushchenko's anti-Russian
    stance was a crucial element in the negative image of his regime by
    the majority of the population of Crimea.

    In the 2010 presidential election, Crimean voters predictably voted for
    the leader of the Party of Regions, while most of the Crimean Tatars
    followed instructions from the Mejlis and voted for Yulia Timoshenko.

    THE PARTY OF REGIONS' LEGACY

    The years 2010-2014 have left a controversial legacy. On the one
    hand, Crimea welcomed the normalization of relations with Russia
    (the signing of the so-called Kharkov Pact on the Black Sea Fleet),
    the adoption of the law on regional languages, and political and
    economic stabilization. On the other hand, under the Yanukovich
    administration anger mounted over government bureaucracy, blatant
    corruption, and the redistribution of property.

    Immediately after the new authorities in Crimea took power, the local
    political space was systematically cleansed. Relying on support from
    a greater share of the electorate, who initially pinned their hopes
    on the Party of Regions as protection from the 'Orange' forces, the
    'Regionals' placed their own people in all leadership positions in
    Crimea. These new leaders were from the Donetsk Region (in Crimea they
    were promptly called 'Makedonians' - a group of outsiders mostly from
    the industrial centers of Makeyevka and Donetsk). Both Crimean prime
    ministers in that period - Vassily Dzharty and Anatoly Mogilyov -
    represented the interests of that powerful business and political clan.

    Firstly, the centers of political influence changed. The legislature
    of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea retained merely representative
    and ceremonial functions, while the center of personnel and economic
    decisions was moved to the republic's Council of Ministers, which was
    closely connected with the Ukrainian presidential staff. Secondly,
    all other Crimean political forces--oppositional forces and political
    allies - were pushed to the sidelines of political life. Economic and
    judicial pressures greatly weakened the Bloc of Yulia Timoshenko (BYT)
    (led by Andrei Senchenko). The strong, local branch of the Ukrainian
    Communist Party, led by Leonid Grach, fractured from within, the
    Union Party (led by Lev Mirimsky) was forced to become less active,
    and the Russian Unity Party (led by Sergei Aksyonov) lost influence.

    As a result, when the Yanukovich administration decided in 2013
    to take a fatal turn towards closer ties with the European Union,
    Crimean residents did not put up strong resistance, although the
    majority was cautious. It is revealing to examine what happened to
    the political elites and society over the brief period Yanukovich
    and the Party of Regions were in power.

    The 'Regionals' conducted a policy to restrict the influence of the
    Mejlis inside the Crimean autonomy. Significantly, the Mejlis could no
    longer distribute budget funds through its proteges inside Crimea's
    governing agencies. Also, there were attempts to counter-balance the
    Mejlis by supporting alternative organizations: the Milli-Firka,
    Sebat, and others. In 2013 several high-ranking Mejlis leaders
    (such as Remzi Ilyasov) were replaced by more loyal figures (Vasvi
    Abduraimov). Conversely, the authorities, with support from Yanukovich,
    reformatted the 'council of representatives' of the Crimean Tatar
    people at the presidential office (established under Kuchma) to
    complement it with the leaders of opposition groups (Lentun Bezaziyev,
    Vasvi Abduraimov, and others), after which Mejlis representatives
    ended their participation in that organization.

    At the same time Kiev agreed to major concessions for the Crimean
    Tatars. The Ukrainian government legalized some territory claimed by
    the Crimean Tatars and gave permission for the local muftiate to build
    a large Cathedral Mosque. That policy proved to be a major test for the
    Mejlis; firstly, because such steps by the Crimean authorities (and to
    a certain extent the authorities in Kiev) coincided with the movement's
    internal crisis, as the Mejlis began to lose authority in the Crimean
    Tatar community and younger people moved into leadership positions.

    For the past decade analysts have repeatedly said that the Mejlis
    was steadily losing power. The organization was gradually becoming
    bureaucratized, while the life of ordinary citizens was not getting any
    better. The Mejlis came under growing criticism. The local authorities
    looked favorably on the opposition organizations that emerged (although
    not very large ones).

    Mustafa Dzhemilev, who remained at the helm of the Kurultai and the
    Mejlis for many years, declared repeatedly his intention to quit the
    post of the organization's leader and end his political career. With
    time, this tactic began to be seen as a sort of political gimmick.

    However, in 2013 Dzhemilev was forced to step down after his son, who
    was a drug addict, shot a man. The Kurultai elected Dzhemilev's deputy,
    Refat Chubarov, as the new leader. Chubarov, despite his merits, lacks
    the authority of his predecessor (Dzhemilev is the movement's honorary
    leader) and is more perceptive to messages from the authorities.

    That policy, however incomplete and inconsistent, paid off during
    the political crisis at the end of 2013 and the beginning of 2014.

    Although both Dzhemilev and Chubarov supported the pro-European Union
    demonstrations in Kiev's Independence Square, the Mejlis preferred to
    avoid active involvement in the events, apparently lacking popular
    trust and fearing retaliation by the authorities. During the entire
    Ukrainian crisis, the Mejlis brought its fighters onto the streets
    for a standoff only once on 26 February 2014, the day a new chapter
    began in Crimea's modern history...

    However, the Party of Regions policy to clean up politics in 2010-2013
    had several boomerang effects. Shortly after party officials focused
    on administrative resources and clamped down on civic society, both
    central and Crimean authorities all of a sudden found themselves
    face-to-face with Euromaidan forces with no civic anti-Maidan forces
    by their side. Reliance on pre-paid political mercenaries, to whom
    Ukrainians commonly refer to as titushki, did not work.

    Weakened non-governmental and political organizations, such as
    Russian Unity, had to promptly mobilize supporters when the Yanukovich
    administration began to crumble. The February 26 events in Simferopol
    demonstrated how weak civic resistance organizations in Crimea
    actually were after being 'cemented in a barrel' (this mafia term
    is the best description for the condition of the political elites)
    by the 'Makedonians.' Mejlis activists blocked the Crimean parliament
    building so that legislators could not gather for a session where they
    were expected to defy the decisions of those who had seized power in
    Kiev the previous day.

    Crimea's political elite was unprepared to resist Euromaidan as well.

    On February 22, after Yanukovich fled the capital, Mogilyov, the head
    of Crimea's government, said that the resolutions by the Ukrainian
    parliament were legitimate and he was ready to implement them. Many
    Crimean legislators preferred to take a wait-and-see position. Several
    Ukrainian parliamentary members from Crimea supported the coup
    either overtly or covertly. If not for the firm position taken by
    Konstantinov-led members of the Crimean legislature's presidium,
    the determination of Russian Unity's leader Aksyonov and support
    from Russia, Crimea would have surely succumbed to the Euromaidan
    supporters.

    Disillusioned with Yanukovich's policies, Crimean society was split
    and demoralized at a very dramatic moment. Alongside those who were
    prepared to actively resist the nationalist forces and join 'people's
    militia' groups, many people were just waiting for the 'victorious
    opposition' to take over and were bracing for the worst.

    The events that followed early in the morning on February 27 in
    Simferopol created a very different situation for the Crimean elite and
    the local community. Changing the date and wording of the referendum
    indicates the evolution of political expectations. At first, Crimean
    legislators did not go much farther other than demanding greater
    autonomy within Ukraine. But as the crisis worsened in Kiev and with
    the stepped-up rhetoric against 'Crimean separatists,' and, of course,
    Russia's clear and firm stance, an unambiguous political strategy
    was drafted. That strategy gained tangible support from a majority of
    the population whose pro-Russian sentiment not only has never faded,
    but also has soared in the wake of the events in Kiev. The referendum
    saw an 82% turnout in which 92% of Crimean voters chose to rejoin
    Russia. There is every reason to believe that those results are very
    close to actual public sentiment.

    The reasons behind the desire to join Russia are as follows:

    a majority of the population still feels lasting historical attraction
    and sympathy towards Russia and - what is very important - Putin's
    Russia; profound disillusionment with Ukraine's 'European' choice
    and mostly fear about the costs of accompanying nationalism.

    The conclusion to be drawn from everything said above is paradoxical.

    The policies that the Party of Regions and Yanukovich pursued in
    Crimea were relatively successful: issues related to the presence of
    Russia's Black Sea Fleet had been settled; Crimean political elites
    had been brought under control; a generally favorable image of the
    new authorities had been created; and important steps had been taken
    to diversify the political influence of the Mejlis. Another five to
    seven years of such policies might have led to the peninsula's full
    integration with the Ukrainian political, cultural, and ideological
    system.

    However, Yanukovich's systemic mistake regarding the foreign policy
    vector of Ukrainian development proved fatal for him, for Ukraine, and
    for its territorial integrity. That mistake sparked a political crisis
    and the regime's rapid collapse. Moreover, the rise of nationalist
    forces fueled a renewal in Crimean fears. Russia's unexpectedly clear
    policy to support the nascent Crimean movement and the favorable image
    of Russia that had taken shape in Crimea by the mid-2010s determined
    the outcome of the March 16 referendum.

    * * * Different interpretations abound as to what happened to the
    'Crimean knot' after the drastic turn in Crimea's fate, which some
    analysts are calling the Russian Spring of 2014. Was that knot loosened
    or tightened? Whatever the case, Russia will have to deal with the
    effects of Crimea being part of an independent Ukraine for 23 years.

    Naturally, those years have left a lasting imprint on Crimean society.

    A Crimean political and business elite has emerged with its own values,
    bonds, and relationships. A self-isolated Crimean Tatar movement
    with its own experience of intra-Crimean dialogue is another fact
    of life. Also, Russia is not the motherland of an entire generation
    of Russian-speaking youth who are coming of age, but the motherland
    of their ancestors. All this complicates political processes in
    Crimea. Russia will likely spend quite some time handling the Crimean
    knot. Fortunately, Russia can rely on its own vast experience.


    From: Baghdasarian
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