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Russia Profile
December 8, 2005
Systemically Separate
Moscow's Control in Chechnya Is More Form Than Content
Comment by Sergei Markedov
Sergei Markedonov is the head of the Department of Problems in Interethnic
Relations at Moscow's Institute of Political and Military Analysis. He
contributed this comment to Russia Profile.
Last week the final phase of the process of the "korenizatsiya" (which could
be translated as "indigenization") of power and authority in Chechnya was
completed with the elections to the republic's parliament. In essence, Moscow
has turned Chechnya over to the operational authority of local groups willing to
maintain the outward appearance of loyalty to Moscow in exchange for significant
political and economic privileges. But will this most recent electoral exercise
serve as a step toward the peaceful resolution of the problems in the country's
"restless republic." In 2004, on the eve of the presidential elections in
Chechnya, one political analyst, Konstantin Kazenin, in a pamphlet entitled
"Around Chechnya: Russia's Sturdy Rear Base in the Southern Caucasus?," very
concisely defined the results of the policy of "Chechenization" - "Chechnya
remains one of the biggest problems facing the Russian state. It is doubtful
that by simply pronouncing its success in the presidential elections, the
Kremlin will have solved its difficulties there. This isn't the first time that
elections and referendums in Chechnya have delivered the desired result, but
none of the previous instances have led to a radical improvement in the
situation in the republic."
After all, the Aug. 31, 2004 elections in Chechnya were followed almost
immediately by the attack on Beslan. The tragedy served as a symbol of the lack
of success in curing the "Chechen sickness" with the application of imitations
of democratic procedures.
Not one of the models put forth by the federal authorities for solving the
"Chechnya question" that has been implemented so far has brought tangible
results. There have been a few:
1. The policy of blissful ignorance (1991-1994 and 1996-1999), the central
idea of which was to simply ignore what was happening in Chechnya.
2. The policy of military coercion (1994-1996 and 1999-2002), with the main
goal of neutralizing the sources of organized separatist opposition.
3. The "indigenization" of power (1995-1996 and 2002-2005), that is the
transfer of power to key figures in the republic and local administrative
groupings.
Not long before the latest anniversary of the separatist revolution in
Chechnya, President Vladimir Putin signed into effect that law that called for
last week's elections. The whole essence of the plan was to increase the
legitimacy of both the Russian federal government and the local administration.
There is little that could realistically threaten the groups in power in
Chechnya today. Chechen separatism, in the sense of a military-political
movement, is in crisis. It has evaporated into a sort of atomistic collection of
bodies protecting their power in different territories of the republic from
other centers of power looking to do just the same. The idea of a "Greater
Ichkeria" no longer ignites Chechen separatists the way it did under former
leaders Dzhokar Dudayev or Aslan Maskhadov. In addition, terrorism as a strategy
for political struggle, was seriously devalued by the tragedy at Beslan and the
continued violence promoted by Islamist terrorists. Today, even some of the
staunchest defenders of the separatist cause in Chechnya see no political
justification for supporting those organizing a great upheaval. Of course
separatism and terrorism continue to be serious problems, but as a unified
organized threat, radical Chechen separatism is presently unable to repeat past
major attacks.
Following the policy of "Chechenization" that has been in place since 2002,
the Kremlin has been prepared to grant concessions to politicians able to show
that they were pro-Moscow, including President Alu Alkhanov and Deputy Prime
Minister Ramzan Kadyrov. In 2003, Moscow forced through the new Chechen
Constitution, not only breaking Russian federal laws, but also breaking with the
rules of the game for relations between Moscow and the regions introduced by
Putin in 2000. The legislative elections last week were just the latest step in
bringing to power in Chechnya a regime that enjoys the more freedom in
exercising their power than any other regional government. While the "leveling
of the playing field" in other republics has meant the removal of any cases
where there were bi-cameral parliaments, in Chechnya, the proposal is to create
exactly this kind of system (with the People's Assembly as the lower house and
the Republican Council as the upper). What's more, the elections for the
republican parliament were announced despite the fact that the status of three
mountain regions of Chechnya (the Galanchovsky, Starayurtovsky and the
Cheberloyevsky regions) were not legally fixed and the process of their legal
formation was only completed once the campaign game was already well underway.
So the elections were the final act in the drama of the Chechenization of
power. Now organs of power that are drawn from local political circles will
develop. But will this help create a real, as opposed to simply formal,
incorporation of Chechnya into the federal whole? The period of ignorance in
federal politics brought into being an unrecognized state within Russia's
borders and led to the growth of ethno-national and religious aggression from
that side. The policy of military coercion also showed its limitations as a
general strategy for bringing Chechnya firmly inside the Russian Federation. The
policy of the Chechenization of power in conditions where there is an absence of
a strong civil society and real (and not pocket) political parties, as well as
the under-the-table nature of agreements for the creation of political elites in
the republic may also lead to the continuation of present political tendencies,
meaning significant independence from control by Moscow.
Today in Chechnya, besides the existence of terrorist and insurgent
separatist groups, there is also systemic separatism on the part of the
political elites who believe that, while remaining part of Russia, Chechnya is
outside of Russian control and jurisdiction. They prefer not to talk about the
phenomenon of systemic separatism, but their political aspirations are clear
enough. It is enough to look at the proposals for the demarcation of authority
between Chechnya and the federal center that were prepared by "our people in
Chechnya" and circulated in 2003 and 2005. These proposals called for the
republic to receive unheard of authorities for a Russian region - including the
right to set up republican representations abroad. The Kremlin continues to
indicate its readiness to sign an agreement of this type to this day, despite
the fact that it has categorically refused to sign such a deal with other
regional governments. A prime example was an initiative that was quietly put
forward by the former-chairman of Chechnya's State Council, Khusein Isayev,
which called for the republic to be paid compensation for the fact that it was
not able to take part in the privatization of state firms in the 1990s. We could
also speak about the activities of the notorious "Vostok" (East) and "Zapad"
(West) battalions in which former separatist fighters now serve on the
pro-Moscow side without anything resembling oversight from the center and
operate outside of the general Russian strategy.
Thus, the parliamentary elections don't represent a political breakthrough.
The elections were carried out under the control of those in power locally and
with the support of "interested parties" in the Kremlin and the Presidential
Administration and ultimately led to the creation of a kind of clone of the
State Duma, although with a local ethno-political flavor. Unfortunately, the
character of the elections for the Chechen legislature won't ultimately help
fight either of the main separatist tendencies that we have witnessed there. The
group around Kadyrov has simply been reinforced by new clients in the parliament
for the promotion of its own interests. The result is a model of power in the
republic that is still not transparent. At the same time, the possibility that
federal oversight in the region will be reduced further remains strong,
particularly in the event of Moscow visits by members of the regional parliament
looking to apply blackmail to gain further concessions. There is little reason
to doubt that attempts of this type will be made.
So the parliament will now be responsible for laying the legislative
groundwork for agreement on the delineation of authority between Moscow and
Grozny. This, as mentioned above, will represent a departure from the practice
in other regions where, since 2000, the practice of negotiation has been ruled
out in practice. Whatever the result, Chechnya's status within Russia will
differ significantly from that of Tatarstan and Bashkortostan, for example. The
North Caucasus republic will possess much more in the way of "sovereign rights."
As a result, while the Russian government is following a policy of increasing
power at the federal level, the policy of "Chechenization" will include
strengthening the influence of clan interests and informal mechanisms of power
in the republic. At the same time, nothing is being done to establish any kind
of normal dialogue with the narrow but promising layer of what, for lack of a
better term, could be called "Europeanized Chechens," living both within the
republic and beyond its borders. What's more, a realistic evaluation of the
potential for working with such groups, or even a simple "inventory" of what is
really out there has never been attempted. This group (and not former fighters
like State Duma Deputy Ruslan Yamadayev) could serve as the conduit for a
general solution in Chechnya, as opposed to the simple local privatization of
power. When I speak about Moscow here, I mean not only the Kremlin, but also the
democratic opposition to the present government. Unfortunately, our liberals are
also unprepared for carrying out a serious investigation of the political market
in Chechnya. It's a lot easier to bring yesterday's separatists under your
banner, as was done by the Union of Right Forces when it included the former
Ichkerian minister of defense, Magomed Khambiev, on its party list.
Thus, the parliamentary elections have served to paint a pretty picture for
the Council of Europe, although it is unlikely that the council will believe any
of it. Not understanding the real political dynamics at play in the region, the
council will criticize Russia all the same. For their part, Russia's
representatives will counter with their criticism of the council's inability to
understand progress and democracy Chechen-style. Pro-Kremlin political analysts
will go on emphasizing that the question of Russia's territorial integrity has
been closed, at the same time that it continues to be opened in Dagestan,
Kabardino-Balkaria, Karachayevo-Cherkessia and, in particular, in Chechnya.
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