Joerg Forbrig
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Armed men seize parliament building in Ukraine's Crimea region
- Crimea is last big bastion of opposition to new government in Kiev following President's ouster
- Tensions have simmered since President Yanukovych's overthrow last week
- Forbrig: Ukraine must decide if it's worth risking recent progress over restive Crimea
Editor's note: Joerg Forbrig
is a Berlin-based program director and Eastern Europe expert with the
German Marshall Fund of the United States. The views expressed in this
commentary are solely his.
(CNN) -- The world's eyes may have been focused on
the breathtakingly fast political changes unfolding in Ukraine's capital
Kiev this week, but it is the Crimean peninsula, where dozens of gunmen
raised the Russian flag over parliament Thursday, that should now be
the primary source of concern for Ukraine's fledgling government and world leaders.
Crimea is an autonomous
republic whose history has long been marred by political tension. Gifted
to Ukraine by Soviet Union leader Nikita Khrushchev in 1954, its
population is ethnic Russian by just over half and Ukrainian by a
quarter, while more than ten percent are Crimean Tatars who are fiercely
anti-Russian as a result of Joseph Stalin's repression of the group a
half century ago.
Russia's strategically
important Black Sea naval fleet is hosted at Sevastopol, the region's
largest city, an arrangement that controversially extended until 2042 by
the ousted Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, who was last seen
fleeing Kiev. His whereabouts are unknown.
The large Russian
population of Crimea has long viewed the central government of Ukraine
with suspicion. In recent days the mood has turned into aggressive
hostility towards the new authorities in Kiev. Crimean Russians see the
newly-powerful opposition movement as illegitimate, sponsored by the
West, and even fascist.
Anti-Ukrainian protests are being held, Russian
vigilante groups have sprung up across Crimea, Russian flags have been
hoisted on government buildings, clashes have broken out between Russian
separatists and loyalist Tatars and Ukrainians, and the Russian
military has been seen patrolling key buildings and infrastructure.
The Russian Federation
has done precious little to contain this dangerous dynamic. On the
contrary, its state-sponsored media have covered the unrest in Crimea
extensively and reiterated the Kremlin's view of the events in Kiev as a
coup d'état. Envoys from Moscow have descended on Crimea to promise
Russian citizenship to all who want it and even the region's
re-integration into Russia proper.
Meanwhile, Russia's
foreign ministry is warning of violations of the human rights of ethnic
Russians in Ukraine, while the Russian military is reportedly preparing
lists for the evacuation of the families of seamen serving at
Sevastopol. Snap military exercises have been ordered by Russian
President Vladimir Putin close to Ukraine's borders. In short, the
Kremlin is stoking the fires of the building separatism that can be
observed in Crimea, despite its official commitment to non-interference
and the territorial integrity of Ukraine.
This situation bears all
the hallmarks of several long-standing, often referred to as "frozen",
conflicts in Eastern Europe. In Transnistria, a breakaway region of
Moldova, in Nagorno-Karabakh, which is contested by Armenia and
Azerbaijan, or in Abkhazia and South-Ossetia, which have seceded from
Georgia, Russia has long propped up separatists, providing political
backing, military support, funding and passports. This undermines the
stability of its smaller neighbors, challenges those nations'
sovereignty, blocks domestic reforms, and impedes European integration.
By underwriting Crimean
separatism, Russia is taking the first steps toward repeating such a
scenario in Ukraine. So while many in Kiev and in Western capitals are
pondering what Russia will do next, the the Kremlin has already made its
decision.
Russia's choice of
tactics is no coincidence. Rather, it is based on a sober analysis of
the post-Euro-Maidan situation in Ukraine, particularly Kiev, and of
Russia's limited leverage there. The hoped-for public mayhem and
political stalemate have not materialized. Western acceptance of the new
government thwarts Russian claims of its illegitimacy. The country's
industrial east shows little inclination to move closer to Russia, and
Western financial aid is shaping up to reduce Ukraine's dependency on
money from Moscow. In this constellation, Crimea is the "weakest link"
in Ukraine today.
This leaves the new
Ukrainian government with a very difficult choice. It is obliged by the
constitution to defend the territorial integrity of Ukraine, to
re-establish public order in Crimea, and to guarantee the safety of its
citizens there, irrespective of their ethnic background. However, the
central government is only just regaining control over the situation,
and faces enormous political, economic and social challenges. Its
resources are already stretched without having to deal with a strong
separatist movement and its even stronger external backer. What is more,
Europe and the U.S. will be of very limited help in confronting Crimean
separatists and their Russian masters.
Ukraine's choice, then,
is between consolidating the gains of the Euro-Maidan revolution across
most of the country, and risking it all to maintain control over a
historically reticent part of Ukraine that may already be lost. The
question that has to be answered now is whether Crimea is a price worth
paying for getting Ukraine on track for democracy and European
integration.
http://edition.cnn.com/2014/02/27/opinion/ukraine-crimea-russia/
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