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NATO’s Plans for Moldova May Trigger Another War

Pravda.Ru
October 19, 2012

Moldova’s NATO dreams may trigger another war

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What is happening in the region is very disturbing. If you remember what Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili was doing before the war in South Ossetia, the similarity is obvious. Just like the current authorities of Moldova, he sought to replace Russian peacekeepers with those of NATO. He also gave a green light to the advent of NATO forces. As a result, Saakashvili attacked South Ossetia.

There are Moldovan politicians who want to unite with Romania. In this case, Moldova’s entry into NATO will happen post factum, because Romania has been a NATO member for the past eight years.

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A NATO base may appear in Moldova, near the border of the breakaway Transdniestrian Republic. Officials representing the Transdniestrian authorities say that the information is true. Their counterparts in Moldova do not deny the news either. Russia stated clearly that it would recognize Transdniestria if Moldova decided to unite with Romania. Is the conflict about to unfreeze?

The situation around the Transdniestrian republic has begun to aggravate again. The story started when Russian Foreign Ministry Ambassador Sergey Gubarev paid a visit to the territory.

“In the event Moldova loses sovereignty or neutrality, the Russian Federation will revisit the issue of Transdniestria’s implementation of self-determination,” said Gubarev.

“The purpose of the negotiations is to build further co-existence of Tiraspol and Chisinau [the capitals of Transdniester and Moldova]. In what form and on which model – it’s up to Tiraspol and Chisinau to decide. The key to the Transdniestrian problem is not in Moscow, Kiev, Vienna, Brussels, or Washington. The key to solving the Transdniestrian problem is in Chisinau and Tiraspol,” the diplomat said.

Actually, Gubarev said nothing new. When there is a small and neutral Moldova that has a Russian-speaking population – this is one situation. The state of affairs becomes completely different when Moldavia unites with the EU and NATO member Romania. Transdniestria, in contrast to Bessarabia and Chisinau, has never been a part of it. This is a completely different country that appears alien to most Transdniestrians.

Needless to say, the entry of a CIS member into NATO cannot but raise concerns with Russia. NATO continues its expansion to the east and is not going to stop. Moldova’s foreign minister made it clear that the Chisinau authorities do not like the presence of Russian peacekeepers in Transdniestria. Earlier, the Moldovan administration repeatedly stated that it would like to replace the Russian peacemakers with NATO forces.

Afterwards, the head of the KGB of Transdniestria, Vladislav Finagin, stated that Moldova was actively working on the advent of NATO troops in the country. According to him, a NATO base may appear on the military training ground near the village of Bulboaca, located between Chisinau and Tiraspol. The official announcement about it is to be made shortly, the official added.

Finagin also said that in the near future Moldovan laws would be amended to invite NATO. “According to our information, the ruling alliance in Moldova is trying to introduce changes in the Constitution, which allow for the deployment of foreign bases in the republic. The range ground in Bulboaca is being equipped appropriately, the area is being prepared for a NATO base,” the chairman of the KGB said in an interview with the Nezavisimaya Gazeta newspaper.

“During the last six months, Chisinau has been strengthening its military constituent with the help of the United States and Romania. Specialists of these countries prepare special units of the Interior Ministry and Information and Security Service of Moldova”, said Finagin. Curiously, no refutation of these words were heard from Chisinau.

What is happening in the region is very disturbing. If you remember what Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili (and partly also Eduard Shevardnadze) was doing before the war in South Ossetia, the similarity is obvious. Just like the current authorities of Moldova, he sought to replace Russian peacekeepers with those of NATO. He also gave a green light to the advent of NATO forces. As a result, Saakashvili attacked South Ossetia.

According to the Constitution, Moldova is a neutral state. However, Prime Minister of Moldova Vladimir Filat has repeatedly made it clear that it would be nice to make the country a member of NATO. There are Moldovan politicians who want to unite with Romania. In this case, Moldova’s entry into NATO will happen post factum, because Romania has been a NATO member for the past eight years.

At the same time, the Moldovan leadership is not ready to make any concessions to Transdniestria. Moldova wants to see its country as a unitary one, with the only official language being Romanian. This state of affairs is absolutely unacceptable for the Russian-speaking Transdniestria. Tiraspol seems to be willing to discuss the question about the federal state of Moldova to talk, but simply a return to Moldova is out of the question.

If Moldova is absorbed into the 22-million-strong Romania, then the Russian-speaking population of Transdniestria will constitute a very small percentage of its population. The authorities in Bucharest will be free to “Romanize” them. Naturally, Russia can not tolerate such a development of events. Leaving hundreds of thousands of Russian people to the mercy of fate and getting a NATO base in the CIS – this is too much.

Moldova may have a very strong desire to obtain Transdniestria, enter NATO and unite with Romania, but they can not do it all at once. The only way to achieve this is a war. However, there are hundreds of thousands of Russian citizens living in Transdniestria, and our country will stand up for them.

Should the conflict continue to aggravate, Moldova will suffer most from it. The country is poor already, and a war can only take it down to the level of Sierra Leone or the Democratic Republic of Congo.

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  1. Michael
    October 20, 2012 at 10:50 pm | #1

    Heavy, bloody trench warfare took place in that region in the WW I, due to the proximity of
    Austro-Hungarian frontier.
    Lets hope history will not repeat itself for everyone’s sake!

    • richardrozoff
      October 21, 2012 at 12:03 am | #2

      Deadly fighting also occurred in 1990-1992 between forces of the central government of the then-independent Moldova and those of Transdniester.
      The latter feared – as can be seen now with full justification – that pan-Romanian elements in Moldova would merge all of Moldova (including Transdniester) into Romania, which in 2004 joined NATO.
      What is now Moldova was ceded by the Ottoman Empire to imperial Russia during the end of the Napoleonic wars: 1812. The Kingdom of Romania did not emerge until 1859.
      After the Russian revolution of 1917 Romania seized current Moldova (Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina), which the Soviet Union took back in 1940.
      The next year hundreds of thousands of Romanian troops participated in Nazi Germany’s invasion of Russia, Operation Barbarossa, and retook Moldova.
      The massacre of ethnic Jews there was particularly atrocious.
      In 2007 the Bucharest Court of Appeals, according to Moldova’s InfoTag, “recognized the War for the Liberation of Besarabia and Bukovina in 1941 to be lawful (the intrusion of Romania together with Germany into Soviet Moldavia in the course of the Second World War).”
      Once again, and with increasingly dangerous implications, NATO is undoing the results of World War II.

  2. Michael
    October 22, 2012 at 11:12 pm | #3

    AS I stated many times before, Romania, Romania, most promiscuous daughter of re-emerging “Holy Roman Empire”.
    Thanks for the historic synopsis Rick. Moldova’s full blown military assault on Transdniester in 1990-92 overlapped wit violent, bloody and deliberate German-U.S. carnage of Federal Yugoslavia.
    Once again invisible yet tangible ties connecting Berlin,Bucharest and Ankara, just like in
    WWII!

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