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- <text id=94TT0287>
- <title>
- Mar. 14, 1994: What Happens If The Big Bear Awakes?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 14, 1994 How Man Began
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RUSSIA, Page 43
- What Happens If The Big Bad Bear Awakes?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Moscow's neighbors fear they may fall prey to a new post-Soviet
- empire
- </p>
- <p>By Kevin Fedarko--Reported by Sally B. Donnelly/Moscow, Ann M. Simmons/Washington
- and Yuri Zarakhovich/Zugdidi
- </p>
- <p> A few miles down the road from the border guards' shack where
- Lieut. Colonel Reso Chachua wards off the winter winds of the
- Caucasus, a thick rope stretches across a boundary that neatly
- illustrates what it means to have Russia as a next-door neighbor.
- On Chachua's side of the rope lies Georgia, a former republic
- of the Soviet Union that declared its independence in 1991.
- Less than 200 yards on the other side lies Abkhazia, a former
- part of Georgia, which won its as yet unrecognized independence
- last year by breaking a Moscow-mediated cease-fire and, with
- the help of arms supplied by Russian military commanders, thrashed
- the Georgians badly enough to send them heading home to Tbilisi.
- </p>
- <p> But no sooner had Eduard Shevardnadze, Georgia's head of state,
- suffered this humiliating defeat than he too began receiving
- military assistance from the Russians. Those weapons, however,
- were not for fighting the Abkhazians--who had already consolidated
- their victory--but for putting down another insurrection by
- Georgian followers of former President Zviad Gamsakhurdia. Thanks
- to the Russian guns, Gamsakhurdia's resistance finally collapsed.
- Now rival leaders on both sides of the rope boundary find themselves
- indebted to Moscow. To Chachua, at least, the logic is all too
- obvious. "Everything here," the Georgian commander concludes,
- "depends on Russia."
- </p>
- <p> That is the realization dawning throughout the 14 republics
- along its periphery that Moscow somewhat possessively refers
- to as the "near abroad." In the Baltics, Belarus, Ukraine and
- across Central Asia, Russia has been engaged in a bold game
- of restoring its influence. By applying pressure along ethnic
- fault lines and playing rival political factions against one
- another, Moscow has succeeded in making its presence count among
- its former vassals. At the same time, Russian diplomats have
- ventured farther abroad, playing a successful part in easing
- the Bosnian conflict--most recently by persuading the Serbs
- to open the airport in the besieged town of Tuzla. While Russians
- feel a new sense of pride as their mediation efforts pay off,
- these activities have also provoked speculation that the imperialist
- Russian bear has awakened from its post-cold war snooze.
- </p>
- <p> The methods by which Moscow seeks to woo back the near abroad
- republics can be crude, often mustered under the broad banner
- of protecting ethnic Russians. In some cases the tool is brute
- military force of the sort used in December 1992 when Russian-manned
- planes from Uzbekistan helped bring down a government of Tajikistan
- composed of Islamic and democratic groups, and installed pro-communist
- rulers. In other regions, Russia prefers to flex its muscles
- by yanking the economic rug out from under a government--as
- it did last week when Moscow began cutting off gas supplies
- to Belarus, Moldova and Ukraine. Regardless of the medium, the
- message remains the same: Moscow holds--and withholds--the
- keys to survival in the near abroad. This is not so much imperialism,
- says former CIA Director Robert Gates, as it is an effort "to
- make a bad situation worse so that these countries are forced
- to come to Russia for help."
- </p>
- <p> Shevardnadze and other near abroad leaders seem convinced that
- such strong-arm tactics indicate a resurgence of the imperialist
- impulses that dominated Russia's czarist and communist regimes
- for centuries. But from Russia's standpoint, such actions are
- simply part of the diplomatic repertoire of any great nation
- that, by virtue of its size and wealth, exerts influence over
- its smaller neighbors.
- </p>
- <p> The Clinton Administration wonders how much Russia's new assertiveness
- derives from the struggle for reform taking place in Moscow.
- Under growing pressure from nationalists like Vladimir Zhirinovsky,
- Russia might be seeking to re-establish its empire by meddling
- belligerently in the affairs of its neighbors. Or it could be
- trying to use its influence to bring peace to the troubled periphery,
- which would benefit Russia's own uncertain stability.
- </p>
- <p> Moscow's foreign policy reflects both trends, an ambivalence
- that is perhaps best embodied by Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev.
- Once viewed as a staunch pro-Western liberal and roundly denounced
- as a "traitor" by hard-liners, Kozyrev has recently begun spouting
- belligerent nationalist rhetoric that harks back to the cold
- war. During the past several months, he has admonished Eastern
- Europe against joining NATO, hinted at keeping Russian troops
- in the Baltics and sternly warned republics not to mistreat
- ethnic Russians. Observers are left to speculate that the Foreign
- Minister's new stance may be a signal that the only way Yeltsin's
- beleaguered Kremlin team can undercut the appeal of the nationalists
- is by becoming more conservative themselves.
- </p>
- <p> Complaints like one last week from Kentucky Republican Senator
- Mitch McConnell about Russia's "neo-imperial ambitions" provoke
- ferocious indignation in Moscow, particularly among those who
- feel Russia has been left standing penniless and irrelevant
- at the edge of the world stage. "People are sick of the Puerto
- Rico-ization of Russian foreign policy," says Vladlen Sirotkin
- of Moscow's Diplomatic Institute. "For too long, we have kept
- the West under the impression that a positive foreign policy
- is when we go along with everything the West does."
- </p>
- <p> Both sides, of course, are discovering that the post-cold war
- honeymoon is over. "Washington and Moscow are realizing that
- their interests don't always coincide," says Alexander Konovalov,
- an analyst at the U.S.A. and Canada Institute. "We should be
- mature enough to realize that is not a tragedy." One sign of
- such divergence is Ukraine's budding relationship with the U.S.,
- underscored last week when Clinton increased his total aid package
- $225 million--but carefully avoided providing any guarantees
- against Russian meddling.
- </p>
- <p> The West might be willing to accept a Russian foreign policy
- based on its own national interests, were it not for the fact
- that democracy in Russia seems to be hanging by a thread, economic
- reform has sputtered to a halt, and an enfeebled Russian President
- seems to slip further into disarray each passing day. No wonder
- Moscow's neighbors--and the rest of the world--are worried
- about Russia's determination to reassert itself and win back
- the international respect it considers its due.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-