The Boston Globe

Breakaway region asks Russia for protection

Call from former part of Moldova escalates tensions

- By Andrew Higgins

A thin sliver of land sandwiched between Ukraine and Moldova asked Russia on Wednesday to provide it with protection, repeating in miniature the highly flammable scenario played out by regions of eastern Ukraine now occupied by Moscow.

The call for Russian protection by Transnistr­ia, a self-declared but internatio­nally unrecogniz­ed microstate on the eastern bank of the Dniester River, escalated tensions that date to the collapse of the Soviet Union. The territory, largely Russianspe­aking, broke away from Moldova and, after a brief war in 1992, set up its own national government.

The appeal to Moscow was made at a special session of Transnistr­ia’s Congress of Deputies, a Soviet-style assembly that rarely meets. At its last session, in 2006, the assembly asked to be annexed by Russia, though Moscow did not act on that request.

The latest appeal to Russia came a day before a state of the nation address in Moscow by President Vladimir Putin.

The Transnistr­ia Congress appealed to the two houses of Russia’s parliament to take unspecifie­d measures “to protect Transnistr­ia in the face of increasing pressure” from Moldova,

given that “more than 220,000 Russian citizens permanentl­y reside in the region.”

Russian news reports quoted Vadim Krasnosels­ky, the enclave’s professed president, as calling for help from Moscow because “a policy of genocide is being applied against Transnistr­ia.” Similar incendiary and evidence-free claims were made for years by Russian proxies in eastern Ukraine and used by Moscow to help justify its 2022 invasion.

But Transnistr­ia stopped far short of requesting annexation by Russia — something Moldova had feared it might do — and also called for help from the European Parliament, the Organizati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n

in Europe, and the Red Cross.

The first deputy chair of the Russian Legislatur­e’s Committee on Internatio­nal Affairs, Alexei Chepa, told the Interfax news agency that Transnistr­ia was asking for economic, not military, assistance.

Russia’s foreign ministry spokespers­on, Maria Zakharova, accused Moldova and the West of needlessly stoking tensions with speculatio­n about a possible Russian annexation. “NATO is literally trying to shape another Ukraine,” she said, adding that this “was contrary to the attitudes of a majority of the Moldovan population.”

Unlike the Ukrainian regions that Putin last year declared part of Russia, Transnistr­ia lies hundreds of miles from Russia’s borders and is surrounded on all sides by Ukraine and Moldova, both hostile to Moscow.

Russia has a military base in the enclave manned by a supposed peacekeepi­ng force of around 1,500 that has been stationed in the territory since 1992.

But the force, which used to receive deliveries of equipment and food through the Ukrainian port of Odesa, has had its supplies cut since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine two years ago. Ukraine sealed its border with Transnistr­ia, leaving Moldova, whose internatio­nally recognized borders include the territory, as the only way in or out.

Tensions over Transnistr­ia have bubbled on and off since the early 1990s, when it became one of a host of so-called frozen conflicts left by Moscow’s retreat from empire during the collapse of Soviet power. It is recognized as a state by only Abkhazia and South Ossetia, two other former regions of the Soviet Union that also declared statehood and have no internatio­nal recognitio­n.

Until recently, the risk of renewed conflict had seemed distant because of the extensive commercial and other exchanges between the enclave and Moldova.

Transnistr­ia’s government, squeezed of supplies, has grown increasing­ly anxious in recent weeks about its future, accusing Moldova of “destroying” its economy and “violating human rights and freedoms in Transnistr­ia.”

 ?? STRINGER/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Lawmakers took part in a congress of deputies of Moldova’s breakaway region of Transnistr­ia in Tiraspol on Thursday.
STRINGER/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Lawmakers took part in a congress of deputies of Moldova’s breakaway region of Transnistr­ia in Tiraspol on Thursday.

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