
#8
Institute for War & Peace Reporting
www.iwpr.net
IWPR'S CAUCASUS REPORTING SERVICE, No. 140, August 1st, 2002
CHECHNYA: IS KREMLIN PREPARING TO NEGOTIATE?
President Vladimir Putin may be manoeuvring to sideline the military and lay the
ground for negotiations with Chechen rebels.
By Sanobar Shermatova in Moscow
Sanobar Shermatova is a correspondent with Moscow News.
Russian president Vladimir Putin is slowly constructing a new Chechen policy,
which could eventually lead to negotiations with supporters of rebel president
Aslan Maskhadov - although probably not with Maskhadov himself.
A flurry of activity over the last few weeks on the Chechen issue suggests
that Putin is trying to further reduce the influence of the military hawks in
Chechnya, while Maskhadov is considering new proposals, which might put an end
to the continuing bloodshed in his republic.
This new phase began at the end of June when Maskhadov sent a letter to the
leaders of the G8 countries ahead of their meeting in Canada, offering to
suspend fighting and begin new peace talks. Russia rejected the offer. Soon
afterwards the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal published an article,
two of whose authors, Zbigniew Brzezinski and Alexander Haig, were distinguished
former US politicians.
The authors outlined new proposals for a compromise deal between the Chechen
leader's supporters and Moscow. The rebels would "acknowledge their respect
for the territorial integrity of the Russian federation," even if they did
not disown their ambitions for independence.
Russia in turn would acknowledge the Chechens' right to "political,
though not national, self-determination". Maskhadov would be encouraged to
urge Chechens to vote in a referendum for "extensive self-government",
similar to what Tatarstan currently enjoys inside Russia. If the ballot was
approved, he would then "demand that those Chechen formations that refuse
to accept a peaceful settlement leave the country".
The next contribution to the debate came from the well-known Chechen
politician and former speaker of the Russian parliament Ruslan Khasbulatov. He
published his own peace proposals under which there would be a "high level
of autonomy for the Chechen republic in its international links and internal
politics", but under which it delegated its most important powers to Moscow
and shared the same currency and defence space as Russia. Russian border-guards
would remain in Chechnya.
In March, Khasbulatov travelled to Istanbul for talks with Maskhadov's
representative, Akhmed Zakayev. He then began a dialogue with the Chechen
leader, exchanging messages by videocassette.
Maskhadov himself told IWPR in an interview recorded in April that, "If
Russia is prepared to undertake internationally, through the mediation of other
states or international organisations, that from henceforth it will not mount
any more armed aggression against Chechnya... then we are ready to discuss any
questions with the Russian side, including questions of independence." (See
CRS 133, June 13 2002).
At the end of July, Maskhadov appointed Kazbek Makhashev as his new special
envoy to replace Zakayev. Makhashev, a former Chechen interior minister, was
once close to the former president of Chechnya, Jokhar Dudayev, but then
developed close ties with figures in Moscow, in particular the
businessman-turned-politician Boris Berezovsky. He has lived quietly in
Ingushetia since the beginning of the second war.
Senior Russian ministers have dismissed Maskhadov's overtures. Defence
minister Sergei Ivanov said that the only Russian official he should be talking
to was a prosecutor, while prime minister Mikhail Kasyanov said on July 4 that
"the only solution to the Chechen crisis lies in a normalization of the
situation, not in negotiations". He was repeating the standard Moscow
policy towards Chechnya - continued fighting against the rebels and no
negotiations.
However, there are growing doubts as to whether the Kremlin will stick to its
position. One straw in the wind was the appointment on July 12 of Abdul-Khakim
Sultygov as President Putin's special representative on human rights for
Chechnya. Sultygov, a Chechen, was until recently director of the little known
Avtorkhanov Institute in Moscow and worked in the Russian parliament's Chechnya
committee. He is well known for his pro-Russian views and had never made any
comments hostile to Moscow.
But since his appointment, Sultygov has publicly denounced human rights
abuses by federal soldiers in Chechnya and called for them to be investigated.
Those who know Sultygov say that his remarks must have been sanctioned by his
boss, President Putin.
Sultygov was appointed ahead of other more prominent candidates, such as
Vladimir Zorin, who has taken part in negotiations in Chechnya in the past and
Nikolai Koshman, a former Chechen prime minister. However, in this case Zorin's
and Koshman's close contacts with the military appear to have counted against
them.
"We can't allow the military to feel that they are victors," a
former high-ranking presidential official told IWPR.
In 1996, the rebels were able to use negotiations to regain Chechnya. This
time of course would be different. If they take place, their main topic will be
the conditions under which fighters can return to a peaceful life.
However, the Kremlin is in no hurry. Well-informed sources stress that
realistically negotiations can be expected only nearer the Russian parliamentary
elections, which will take place at the end of next year. Three months after
that, in the spring of 2005, will come the next presidential elections.
It is difficult to forecast what the situation will be in 2005 in Russia. But
the sources say that Putin well understands what a powerful weapon Chechnya
could be in the hands of his opponents, if the conflict is not settled before
then - just as Boris Yeltsin discovered in 1996.
But for a peace settlement to work, the president needs to take personal
control of the negotiating process and bypass the military, which opposes peace
talks. The next step may be the appointment of a special presidential
negotiating representative.
Before this happens, the Kremlin will want certain other conditions to be in
place. First of all, they want to strengthen local Chechen security forces, so
that they can fight the most radical groups of fighters, who will not agree to
lay down their arms. Then they want to create a law-and-order environment under
which returning fighters pose no threat.
So Moscow may first try to approve a new constitution for Chechnya, which
reinforces its secular, pro-Russian status. And they may want to wait for
another winter to pass.
"I have the impression that the federal authorities do not have a plan,
but they've decided to wait and see how the fighters survive the winter,"
Khasbulatov told this correspondent in an interview. "I know that people in
government are saying in the corridors that Chechen policy has reached a dead
end, but I do not have any information from the Kremlin."
Finally, if negotiations do resume, it seems unlikely that Maskhadov himself
will take part. He is still on a Russian list of wanted men. But Moscow has at
least embarked, albeit cautiously, on what could be the beginning of a political
process.
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