http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Printable.asp?ID=16506
 
Ripples Beyond Ukraine
By Stephen  <http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/authors.asp?ID=321>
Schwartz
Tech Central Station | January 3, 2005


TASHKENT, Uzbekistan -- Two and a half millennia have passed since the Greek
armies of Alexander the Great penetrated Central Asia, and the wave of
democratic reforms visible in the post-Soviet and Muslim countries is now
reaching Uzbekistan. On December 26, the same day Ukraine held the second
round of its highly-contested vote, citizens of this Muslim-majority former
Soviet republic went to the polls to elect a bicameral parliament. 

As I write, on December 29, the results of the Uzbek vote are both
incomplete and controversial. The allocation of seats to the various
parties, including the ruling National Democratic Party of President Islom
Karimov, has yet to be announced, and functionaries of the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), have declared the balloting
insufficiently democratic. But the OSCE inspires little confidence in such
matters. For myself, I have witnessed several years of OSCE meddling and
mismanagement of the promised transitions to democracy in Bosnia-Hercegovina
and Kosovo, and do not perceive the OSCE as possessing moral standing to
issue such criticisms.

At the same time, while observing the Uzbek elections, I was reminded of
earlier chapters in the history of post-Communist democratization. Whether
the OSCE was satisfied or not, ordinary Uzbeks lined up enthusiastically to
cast their votes on a multipage paper ballot. Meanwhile, the Uzbek
authorities made extensive preparations to accommodate foreign journalists,
who did not show up in substantial numbers. I had seen the same phenomena in
Croatia in 1990, when that former Yugoslav republic held its first election.
The Croatian vote, boycotted by the country's Serb minority, was followed by
an atrocious war. However, Croatia will hold a normal presidential election
on January 2, demonstrating that even the worst misfortunes may be overcome
in the new democracies.

Uzbekistan's Muslim population overwhelmingly follows the peaceful
traditions of Sufi spirituality, and the terrorist Islamic Movement of
Uzbekistan (IMU), allied to al-Qaida, was almost completely destroyed with
the fall of the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan. Although Uzbekistan has
seen local bombings and other terror incidents, the IMU recruited Uzbeks to
fight outside the country and, significantly, never succeeded in launching a
jihad within its borders. Thus, there is no shadow of armed conflict over
Uzbekistan; yet the news from Ukraine continues to stir deep concern here.
With pro-Russian presidential candidate Viktor Yanukovych refusing to
concede failure to Viktor Yushchenko, many fear that Ukraine could, like the
former Yugoslavia, collapse in violent disorder. 

There are more than a few parallels between Ukraine and the former
Yugoslavia. The entrenched pro-Russian elements in eastern Ukraine,
Christian Orthodox in religion and nostalgic about the Stalinist past, have
agitated against local nationalists in western Ukraine, who include many
Catholics and Uniates (Byzantine-rite Catholics), and who seek entry into
the European Union. The Yanukovych forces have labeled Yushchenko supporters
"fascists," "Jew-baiters," and "agents of the U.S." Much of this rhetoric is
identical to that employed by Milosevic and his cohort in Belgrade against
Croatia and Bosnia-Hercegovina, almost 15 years ago.

Civil war in Ukraine would be an unmitigated disaster for the people of that
country, but also for the other post-Soviet transitional republics. Two
issues come into play in the Ukrainian controversy: democracy itself and
Muscovite interference. Uzbek president Karimov, although accused of
authoritarianism, has walked a tightrope between condemnation of Leonid
Kuchma, the former Ukrainian leader and patron of Yanukovych, and criticism
of the involvement of international democratic activists backed by the U.S.,
in the Ukrainian "orange revolution." Karimov, who has become increasingly
wedded to his regime's military alliance with the U.S. in the war on terror,
wants to keep Russia, and its president, Vladimir Putin, at a distance. But
he is also fearful of a "domino effect" swiftly overtaking the rest of the
so-called Commonwealth of Independent States.

Nevertheless, Karimov has a point in his denigration of the foreign-backed
activist groups that have assisted Yushchenko, and it also echoes the
history of former Yugoslavia. Western media and political circles are fond
of citing the U.S.-assisted 2000 "revolution" against Milosevic as a
positive example of change, and veterans of that campaign have flocked to
Kyiv. But the removal of Milosevic was mainly cosmetic, and Serbia has sunk
further into the abyss of mafia domination. 

Putin, for his part, seems intent on dragging Russia into a similar black
hole, and in liquidating the process of democratization in his own country.
Uzbek intellectuals note that Putin brags about his employment with the
Soviet secret police, speaks in loving tones about Stalin, and concentrates
his fire on "oligarchs," which in Moscow is considered a code-term for "rich
Jews." The Russian president's interference in the Ukrainian election has
earned him hitherto-unheard disapproval from Washington. 

One might compare Uzbekistan favorably with Russia, a former superpower --
but also with Saudi Arabia, which has ambitions to supreme leadership of the
Muslim world. While Russia moves further away from democracy, Uzbekistan has
taken steps that, however flawed, represent forward movement. In Uzbekistan,
at least, voting takes place, with women included on the voters' registers,
and 30 percent of the candidates are female. By contrast, Saudi Arabia has
promised limited municipal elections for February 10, but women will be
barred from participation. Meanwhile, Saudi clerics, as preachers of
Wahhabism, the state religion in the kingdom, continue to incite jihadists
to wreak terror in Iraq, in what we must hope is a futile attempt to disrupt
that country's new electoral process.

In the ultimate reckoning of history, the fate of Uzbekistan is, in my view,
no less significant than that of Ukraine.
<http://www.techcentralstation.com/122204A.html> As I have previously
written on TCS, a successful, bloodless transition in the latter country may
encourage such an outcome in other places, including many in the Muslim
world. Certainly, similar developments in Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and other
post-Soviet Muslim societies could accelerate the global democratic
movement, including possibilities for a more rapid and positive, orderly and
rational, change in Saudi Arabia. 

At this moment all eyes are on Ukraine, and justifiably so. President Bush
should step up his pressure on Vladimir Putin to back off, and to call off
his proxy, Yanukovych. Let Ukraine be Ukraine. Let democracy prevail. If
Ukraine falls back into the pit, hope for real reform will dissipate in
Uzbekistan, to the detriment of its own citizens and of our alliance with
its people, who are in the forefront of Afghan reconstruction, and of the
general struggle against Islamist extremism. The stakes are too high to
ignore the aspirations of Ukrainians for democracy. 





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