Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 12/2010

Radical Islam in the North Caucasus

Sergey Markedonov

November 2010

Center for Strategic and International Studies

Abstract

As Kyrgyzstan plunges into crisis and the threat of a second Afghanistan in Central Asia looms large, the situation in the “Big Caucasus” seems less pressing and thus overshadowed. The worst scenarios predicted by analysts and politicians for the period of the 2008 August war have not been realized. The Russian attempt to “replace the regime” of Mikhail Saakashvili or apply the Georgian pattern in Ukraine, expected by many in the West, has not taken place. Neither have the attempts from the West (the United States, NATO, and others) to “nudge Georgia into a rematch,” which were expected in Moscow. Nonetheless, the Caucasus region remains one of the most vulnerable spaces in Eurasia. In the Caucasus, the first precedent of a revision of borders between the former Soviet republics was established. For the first time in Eurasia, and particularly in the Caucasus, partially recognized states have emerged. While their independence is denied by the United Nations, it is recognized by the Russian Federation, a permanent member of the UN Security Council. After the “hot August” of 2008, Moscow demonstrated its willingness to play the role of a revisionist state for the first time since 1991. Russia defines the “Big Caucasus” as the sphere of its vital interests and priorities and consequently pretends to be a key stakeholder for the whole region.