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“You Take Your Oath Only Once:” Crimea, The Black Sea Fleet, and National Identity Among Russian Officers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Sven Gunnar Simonsen*
Affiliation:
International Peace Research Institute, Oslo, Norway
*
The author would like to thank Pavel Baev, Tor Bukkvoll, Pål Kolstø, Gwen Sasse and the anonymous referees for comments on earlier versions of this article.

Extract

The Soviet military officer's motto was “I serve the Soviet Union.” He had taken an oath to a state whose leadership constantly stressed the ethnic diversity of its population. When the USSR fell apart, however, only one of its 15 successor states—the Russian Federation—did not declare itself the homeland of one specific ethnic group. The reality of the divorce was difficult to grasp for many people in the former Soviet Union. In Russia, ideas of democracy and hopes for the future of the RSFSR as an independent state were standing strong. Not all the newly independent states would be missed; the Central Asian republics were widely seen as a culturally distant periphery tapping the RSFSR of resources. However, shedding off Kazakhstan, Belarus, and above all, Ukraine was a completely different story.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2000 Association for the Study of Nationalities 

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References

Notes

1. Russian ethnicity is as a rule here used to describe those with russkiy listed in their “point five” in official documents; the so-called “passport nationality.” For a detailed discussion of the issue of nationality in the Soviet Union and Russia, see Sven Gunnar Simonsen, “Inheriting the Soviet Policy Toolbox. Russia's Dilemma Over Ascriptive Nationality,” Europe-Asia Studies, Vol. 51, No. 6, 1999, pp. 10691087.Google Scholar

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8. For a more detailed chronology up to this event, see Ustina Markus, “Black Sea Fleet Dispute Apparently Over,” Transition, Vol. 1, No. 13, 1995, pp 30–34. The current state of Crimea and the BSF in Russian-Ukrainian relations was defined in May 1997. On 28 May, the prime ministers of the two countries signed three agreements related to the BSF issue: on the division of the fleet, on Russia's rights to bases in Crimea, and on debt settlement. The parties agreed that Russia's fleet would remain based in Sevastopol, leasing facilities there for 20 years. Then, on 31 May, Presidents Yeltsin and Kuchma signed a Treaty on Friendship, Cooperation and Partnership, declaring respect for the respective countries' territorial integrity. Both countries' federal assemblies have since ratified these agreements. For a brief outline of the agreements, see Vladimir Baranovsky, “Russia: Conflicts and Peaceful Settlement of Disputes,” in SIPRI Yearbook 1998 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998), pp 118–120. A thorough analysis is provided in James Sherr, “Russia-Ukraine Rapprochement? The Black Sea Fleet Accords,” Survival, Vol. 39, No. 3, 1997, pp. 3350.Google Scholar

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50. See, e.g., “I snova predshtormovaya pogoda,” Rossiya, 12–18 May 1993.Google Scholar

51. Interfax, 14 October 1993, FBIS-SOV-93-199CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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55. Ibid.Google Scholar

56. “Ukraine: The Crimean Question,” The Economist, 11 January 1992.Google Scholar

57. Ingemar Oldberg, “Vad hande med Svarthavsflottan?” Internationella Studier, No. 1, 1996, p. 12. Establishing beyond doubt the details of the financing of the BSF is very difficult for several reasons; some sources claim Ukraine still made some contributions.Google Scholar

58. RFE/RL Daily Brief, 24 August 1994Google Scholar

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67. The post of JAF commander was abolished by the CIS defense ministers in August 1993.Google Scholar

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