New Eastern Europe - November-December 2017

(Ben Green) #1

44


Strategic bonds

In February 2014 Zhirinovsky urged Russian authorities to annex the former
five Central Asian Soviet republics and turn them into a “Central Asian federal
district”, while Limonov called on the Kremlin to annex the northern parts of Ka-
zakhstan. Astana’s reaction was vociferous but was mostly ignored by Moscow,
which dismissed the calls as privately held views expressed by a small number of
individuals, not the Kremlin’s official policy.
On global issues, Kazakhstan staunchly sides with
Russia and supports many Russian integration initia-
tives in the former Soviet space. It is a founding mem-
ber of the Moscow-led free trade bloc, the Eurasian
Economic Union (EEU), which was set up in 2015
from the Custom Union of Russia, Kazakhstan and
Belarus. It is also a member of the CIS Collective Se-
curity Treaty Organisation (CSTO), a military alliance
of six former Soviet countries. Kazakhstan’s strategic
bonds with Russia are also largely determined by the
world’s second longest land border, stretching for
nearly 7,000 kilometres and where a sizeable ethnic
Russian population resides, which accounts for a fifth
of Kazakhstan’s total population.
Many consider these facts a guarantee that Russia will not consider going into
an open conflict with Kazakhstan and seize part of the territory. Others believe
that Kazakhstan’s ethnic Russians are too apolitical to organise themselves into a
meaningful force that would openly advocate the annexation of predominantly
Russian areas in northern and eastern Kazakhstan by Moscow.
“In the past there were certain public organisations that represented the inter-
ests of ethnic Russians in Kazakhstan. But these organisations have long become
history. There is practically nothing to watch now and it is hard to judge the mood
based on publications by certain individuals,” says Andrey Chebotarev, director
of the Almaty-based Alternative think tank. “There are no deliberate factors that
would somehow worsen the socio-political mood among ethnic Russians in Ka-
zakhstan. There are some factors that affect the entire population but there are no
serious factors that specifically target the ethnic Russian population.”
Chebotarev, however, does not believe Crimea would be repeated in Kazakhstan:
“I have no expectation of the Crimean scenario because we do not have any serious
organised groups that existed in the 1990s, such as the Russian Community and
Lad (Russian nationalist organisations – editor’s note) as well as Cossack organisa-

Kazakhstan’s
bonds with
Russia are largely
determined by the
fact that it shares
the world’s second
longest land
border, stretching
for nearly 7,000
kilometres.

Opinion & Analysis The crawling threat of the Crimea scenario, Naubet Bisenov
Free download pdf