REPUBLIC-LEVEL TERRITORIAL CONFLICTS IN THE USSR

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP08C01297R000500010002-6
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
C
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
October 16, 2012
Sequence Number: 
2
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Publication Date: 
December 20, 1990
Content Type: 
MEMO
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012 /10/18: CIA-RDPO8C01297R000500010002-6 DIRECTORATE OF INTELLIGENCE 20 December 1990 Republic-level Territorial Conflicts In the USSR Summary 25X1 Territorial disputes based on past borders or on ethnic factors are surfacing in all fifteen republics of the USSR as ethnic balkanization accelerates and the center's ability to maintain discipline erodes. While most republic governments have soft-pedalled ethnic disputes over boundaries, intractable disputes--such as the status of Nagomo-Karabakh--and demands by ethnic groups such as the Russians and Gagauz in Moldova for sovereignty over the territory they inhabit are likely by ethnic groups such as the Russians and Gagauz in Moldova for sovereignty over the territory they inhabit are likely to persist. In the eyes of central authorities, such disputes serve to emphasize the republics the dangerous of striking off on their own, efforts by minority groups to establish their own; administrative units or to break away from republics have slowed or complicated independence drives in some republics. On the other hand, violence accompanying such disputes could require additional costly military intervention and could also increase the number of refugees in the USSR The possibility that republics will involve themselves in international border issues probably also is unsettling to Moscow. The consequences of border disputes--such as possible appeals for refugee aid--are likely to be more important to the United States than the conflicts themselves, although the United States will robably be asked to acknowledge Lithuania's current borders. This memorandum was prepared by the Office of Soviet Analysis. Information available as of 20 December 1990 was used ill its pre s aration. Comments and questions are welcome and may be directed to Chief, Internal Politics Division SOV M ##-##### 25X1 CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/10/18: CIA-RDP08C01297R000500010002-6 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 10 Population: 3,937,000 Area: 13,012 sq. mi. LDAVIA "shinev ROMANIA uc crest THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/10/18: CIA-RDP08C01297R000500010002-6 MOLDAVIA History: Under pad with Germany, disputed region of Bessarabia acquired by the Soviet Union from Romania in 1940. It then became part of the republic of Moldavia. Population: Ethnically and linguistically Romanian. Nationalist trends: The border crossing into Romania was simplified, as demanded by populace. In 1989, republic won the right to spell in Roman letters instead of Cyrillic. There are some calls for reunification with Romania, but this is still considered a fringe sentiment. Moldavians and Gagauz, who want autonomy, have clashed recently in the south. Nakhichevan /Residents tore down border fences on New Year's Eve to gain access to fertile land and establish contacts with fellow Azeris in Iran. !Influx of Azeri refugees from Nagorno-Karcabakh had contributed to tensions. Border with Iran is now sealed, with formal checkpoints. In what amounts to a symbolic gessture against the Soviet Army crackdown on Azerbaijan, Nakhichevan declared independence from the Soviet Union Jan. 20. LITHU BEL Ma TURKEY Leningrad Polarization is growing between conservative leadership and increasing radicalized population. Widespread rationing introduced right after Sverdlovsk wine riot -- and after Estonia whose prices just went up, started buying cheaper Leningrad goods. scow Tyumen Top Communist bosses resigned Jan: 18 as social tensions heig htened. Volgograd Social tension is mounting over food shortages and ineffectual parry leadership. First secretary Vladimir Ilyich Kalashnikov resigned Jan. 24, after profile in Ogonyok magazine depicted him as most incompetent party first secretary in country. ARMENIA AZERBAI AN Labor Unrest Coal miners in Vorkuta (Arctic), Kuzbass (Siberia), and Donbass (Ukraine are all working now, after extended strikes beginning last summer. But Kuzbass miners, feeling governrne , has not kept promises made to settle strike, are reported ready toxesume stoppage: Promises include worker s4'-management..e;' and chances to earn harcPurrencyl, The metalkagical industry- in tits Urcal3 Ukraine is also heating up. Old factories are, ?- damaging the environment. Living standards' are poor. Profits are down due to the increased cost of electricity. KAZAKHSTAN Svn New o k On Year's e, of wine and vodk i cheese, fish, sous appeared on in this and ot er cti with goods o demo Kuzbass ? - rest is t:d protest ores. Within hours', wine, p lock , and other foodreperod s s. t analysts doubt officials es wil be able to come up nd i h future. Thursday, February 1, 1990 GORBACHEV'S CHALLENGE Soviet Hot Spots Ethnic unrest and popular dissatisfaction over a declining economy continue to spell trouble for Moscow ? Baltic republics to the west call for independence, Armenia and Azerbaijan to the south fight over rival claims to territory, and the threat of disruptive strikes looms tit0 By Linda Feldmann Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor MOSCOW FOR Soviet leader Mikhail Gor- bachev, crisis has overlapped crisis in the first weeks of 1990. On Dec. 31, the Azeris of the au- tonomous republic of Nakhichevan began tearing down border fences with Iran ? an act unprecedented in Soviet history. Local chapters of the Azerbaijan Popular Front deposed Communist leaders in several cities. By mid-January, long-brewing tensions between Azerbaijan and the neighboring republic of Armenia es- calated to a point of virtual civil war, after Azeris killed dozens of Arnie- turns in Baku, Azerbaijan's capital, and sent thousands fleeing. And when the Kremlin feared that Azerbaijan's nationalist Popular Front was set to take control of Baku, it sent thousands of troops to reassert Soviet power. Now Azerbaijan's par- liament is talking of secession. As civil war loomed in the Tran- scaucasus, the Soviet leader and oth- er Politburo members were on a mis- sion to the rebellious Baltic republic of Lithuania, which is in the midst of its own bloodless revolution to re- establish its prewar nationhood. Mr. Gorbachev's visit, sparked by the Lithuanian Communist Party's deci- sion in December to break away from Moscow's control, failed to dampen the Lithuanians' enthusiasm. All around the Soviet Union, local leaders are losing their authority. In the last two weeks, six regional party bosses have been forced to resign. In all three Baltic republics, pro-inde- AFGHANISTAN Population: 5,000,015 Area: 26,911 sq. mi. GEORGIA Nationalist sentiment is strong, but political opposition is fragmented. In November, the Georgian parliament declared the republic's right to secede. Last month, pro-secessionist forces held a two-week vigil and hunger strike at a government building. Communists are striving to overcome hostility engendered by use of poison gas to break up April 9, 1989, demonstration in Tbilisi. Ossetians vs. Georgians: South Ossetian activists seek language and cultural rights, plus unification with North Ossetia, made part of Russian Federation by Stalin. Interior Ministry troops are periodically deployed to keep peace. Ahlchazians vs. Georgians: Frequent clashes occur throughout Abkhazian autonomous republic in a battle to upgrade status to union republic. ARMENIA Population: Approximately 3 million Area: 11,500 sq. mi. (slightly larger than Maryland) AZERBAIJAN Population: Approximately 7 million Area: 33,400 sq. mi. (about the size of Maine) Central Asia: Tension mounts over declining living standards, high unemployment, serious ecological damage (Aral Sea dying); poor health care, and corrupt leadership. ci '- Fergana Valley, Uzbekistan: Interior Ministry troops xerot stationed here to keep peace after murderous riots against Meskhetian Turks last June. Novi Uzen, Kazakhstan: Kazakhs rioted last summer over concern that migrant workers were taking plum jobs. Population: 49,755,000 Area: 233,089 Locked in virtual civil war with neighboring Azerbaijan over disputed region of Nagorno- Karabakh, a territory in Azerbaijan inhabited largely by Armenians. Paramilitary groups have formed to protect this small republic, which is surrounded by historical enemies Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan. Armenians blame Gorbachev for failure to protect them from pogroms in Azerbaijan and for slow pace of reconstuction after devastating December 1988 earthquake. AZERBAIJAN Fighting war on two fronts: against Armenia, over Nagorno-Karabakh, and against the Kremlin, which sent Army troops Jan. 20 to force their way into capital of Baku when Communist control appeared in danger. Influx of refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh seen as heightening social tensions that led to anti-Armenian pogroms in Baku starting Jan. 13. Communist Party has been overthrown by Popular Front in several cities and towns. Statues of Lenin destroyed. UKRAINE The nationalist organization Rukh is contesting March 4 local elections on the slogan "Councils without Communists." Rukh pushes for preservation of Ukrainian culture arid legalization of Ukraine's Uniate Church. Since Lvov's Transfiguration Church declared itself to be Uniate Oct. 29, some 200 churches have come under the control of Uniates. On Jan. 16, Uniate and Russian Orthodox representatives met for the first time in a possible signal that legalization may be in works. ESTONIA History: Independent nation from 1918 to 1940. Hitler-Stalin Pact of August 1939 led to annexation by the Soviet Union, Population: 60 percent Estonian, 30 percent Russian, 10 percent other. Drive for independence: Parliament is expected soon to eliminate Communist Party's constitutional guarantee on power, thus formally recognizing the ex:isting multiparty system. Some 20 different political parties are active, including three social democratic movements, which are gaining popularity. Plans for economic self-sufficiency are the most developed of the three Baltic republics. Estonia expected to be first to introduce its own currency. Residency requirements for voting thought discriminatory by non Estonian population led to strikes last year. LATVIA History: Independent nation from 1918 to 1940. Hitler-Stalin Pact of August 1939 led to annexation by the Soviet Union. Population: 52 percent Latvian, 48 percent Slavic and other. Drive for independence: Last month parliament canceled the Communist Party's leading role. The Popular Front, a progressive multi-ethnic coalition, won a majority of seats in December elections to local councils. The front is openly working toward an independent Latvia. ilnius LITHUANIA History: Independent nation from 1918 to 1940. Hitler-Stalin Pact of August 1939 led to annexation by Soviet Union. Population: 80 percent Lithuanian, 10 percent Russian, 7 percent Polish. Drive for independence: Gorbachev's recent sit to republic failed to dampen the desire of a sizable majority to reestablish statehood, following the decision by the republic's Communist Party to declare independence from Communist Party of Soviet Union. During the visit, 300,000 people rallied peacefully. Moscow's plan for a "law on secession" is seen largely as a device to hinder the independence drive. pendence movements look set to take control of local councils in elections to be held in the next two months. The Soviet leader also faces long- simmering dissatisfaction over the declining standard of living. When popular discontent over food and al- cohol shortages has reached a boiling point? such as in Swerdlovsk on New Year's Eve ? people have taken to the streets. Labor unrest threatens to re- appear, as workers claim that government promies made to nego- tiate an end to lastt year's dramatic coal strikes have mot been fulfilled. The issue of offiicial privilege has also ignited passiorns. For example, there's the tale of thie regional execu- tive committee officcial in Chernigov, Ukraine, whose trafffic mishap Jan. 6 led to his firing ancd expulsion from the party. It seems the townspeople who gathered at Valery Zaika's acci- Graphiccs by Shirley Horn - Staff dent discovered meat and other rar- ities in the trunk of his car. The an- gry crowd dragged the car to the front of the regional party committee building and held a spontaneous demonstration. For the people, this was the final outrage. Soon there- after, a string of party officials, in- cluding the first secretary, were fired. Some analysts suggest that angry masses demanding reform are ex- actly what Gorbachev needs to push perestroika (restructuring) along. And that the ouster of local Communist Party officials left over from "the years of stagnation" (Leonid Brezh- nev's rule) is no great loss. But as Gorbachev heads into a key meeting of the party Central Com- mittee Feb. 5 and 6, the question re- mains whether he'll be able to con- tain the surge in popular aspirations released by his own reform policies. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/10/18: CIA-RDP08C01297R000500010002-6 Lr-