Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07MOSCOW1394
2007-03-29 15:14:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Moscow
Cable title:  

DAGESTAN: "IT IS ENOUGH THAT THE PEOPLE KNOW

Tags:  PGOV PINR RS 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO9086
PP RUEHDBU
DE RUEHMO #1394/01 0881514
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 291514Z MAR 07
FM AMEMBASSY MOSCOW
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 8760
INFO RUCNCIS/CIS COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUEHXD/MOSCOW POLITICAL COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 06 MOSCOW 001394 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/29/2017
TAGS: PGOV PINR RS
SUBJECT: DAGESTAN: "IT IS ENOUGH THAT THE PEOPLE KNOW
THERE WAS AN ELECTION"


Classified By: PolMinCouns Alice G. Wells. Reason: 1.4 (b, d)

"It is enough that the people know there was an election.
The people who cast the votes decide nothing. The people who
count the votes decide everything."

-- Soso Jugashvili, Caucasus Philosopher

Introduction and Summary
------------------------

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 06 MOSCOW 001394

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/29/2017
TAGS: PGOV PINR RS
SUBJECT: DAGESTAN: "IT IS ENOUGH THAT THE PEOPLE KNOW
THERE WAS AN ELECTION"


Classified By: PolMinCouns Alice G. Wells. Reason: 1.4 (b, d)

"It is enough that the people know there was an election.
The people who cast the votes decide nothing. The people who
count the votes decide everything."

-- Soso Jugashvili, Caucasus Philosopher

Introduction and Summary
--------------


1. (C) Dagestan went to the polls March 11, as did many
localities in Russia, but the elections bore little relation
-- both in process and in meaning -- to what happened
elsewhere in the country. The elections were a way for the
four main power groupings to test their strength for the
first time since former leader Magomedali Magomedov -- "the
Grandfather" retired last year and Putin appointed a
full-fledged President, the reforming technocrat Mukhu
Aliyev, in his place. In addition, the elections represent a
compromise by local groups with the trappings of democracy
and party politics foisted upon them by Moscow; the elections
are a veneer over the real system, not unlike a Halloween
costume a child might put on for one day to please its
parents. Mukhu Aliyev is standard bearer for United Russia,
but leaders of the other three power groups were all on the
United Russia ticket as well, all the while supporting
candidates in opposing parties -- the factions transcend
party bounds. The results were carefully calculated to
please Moscow while finding a middle point based on the
relative strengths of the four factions. But the basic
problems of inter-factional strife remain. End Summary.

Warlord Democracy
--------------


2. (C) Time was, Dagestan held the fairest elections on
earth. That was after the 1992 collapse of the Soviet Union
and the retreat of Moscow from the affairs of the small
mountain republic. In February 1998, for example, Said
Amirov -- a warlord confined to a wheelchair by a 1992
assassination attempt, one of the 14 he has survived -- ran
for mayor of Makhachkala, Dagestan's capital. Amirov is of
the Dargins, the second largest of Dagestan's 39 official
ethnic groups. Amirov's main opponent was a warlord of the
Avars, Dagestan's largest ethnic group.


3. (C) Both realized that using the normal techniques for a

Caucasus election -- buying votes, stuffing ballots,
falsifying the count -- would unleash a clan war that could
kill hundreds or even thousands. So they agreed to hold an
honest election, because only an election without a hint of
falsification would allow the loser to concede defeat without
losing dignity. Before the election, both sides had thugs
out on the street ensuring that votes were not bought (all
ethnic groups are represented in Makhachkala, and no one
group predominates). Both sides had thugs at the entrance to
polling precincts, checking passports to ensure that only
those entitled to vote in a particular polling place was
allowed to enter it. Both sides had thugs observing the
voting, to ensure there was not ballot-stuffing or multiple
voting. And both sides had thugs watching over the vote
count. Amirov won, and remains mayor to this day -- and the
most powerful warlord in Dagestan.


4. (C) Dagestan was run in Moscow's absence, in the years
following the Soviet collapse, by a curious ethnic balancing
system. Dagestan's centuries-old unit of power was the
"jamaat," best translated as "canton." This was a
self-governing group of clans living in one small
geographical area. There are several hundred of these, each
with its own dialect. When the Russians arrived in the 19th
century they couldn't deal with that many different peoples,
and grouped those speaking closely related languages together
-- all those speaking dialects close to Avar became Avars,
etc. That reduced the number of peoples to 39, and these
were further reduced for political purposes to 14 by
subsuming small related groups into the Avars and Dargins.
After Moscow's influence disappeared from Dagestan in the
early 1990s, the locals formed a Presidential Council --
rather than a one-person Presidency -- composed of one
representative from each of the 14 groups. At the same time,
government ministries and senior bureaucratic posts were
carefully doled out to ensure that each group got its fair
share of the top jobs.


5. (C) The competition between jamaats remained and even
intensified now that, for example, all of the Avar jamaats
were competing for the one Avar seat on the Council. This
tension produced a free-wheeling political system in which
each jamaat or bloc of jamaats had its own "ethno-party"

MOSCOW 00001394 002 OF 006


capable of calling on significant armed force to back up its
political claims. Parties banded together in ad hoc
alliances to promote their own interests and defend the
interests of the wider ethnic group (when these did not
conflict). Magomedali Magomedov, "The Grandfather" and Chair
of the Presidential Council, kept the peace by brilliantly
playing all off against all, acting as the peacemaker. Any
one party could exercise a veto by calling its ethnic militia
down from the mountains, guns at the ready, to take over the
main square of Makhachkala. Magomedov received their
delegations, made promises and concessions, and kept the
balance. Of course, sometimes warlords insisted on demands
that all the others thought were excessive. The others would
talk to him. If he still would not see reason, well, a large
and very public explosion usually put an end to the demands.
As Soso Jugashvili also said, "No man, no problem."

The New Order
--------------


6. (C) But much has changed in Russia, and perforce in
Dagestan. Under Putin, Moscow has returned with a vengeance.
It took six years to force out "The Grandfather," but
Magomedov finally retired in 2006. Putin chose the
technocratic speaker of Dagestan's parliament, Mukhu Aliyev,
to be President, replacing the entire Presidential Council
system. Aliyev seems to have been the choice of the
"Grandfather," and also seems to have been acceptable to the
reformist Presidential Representative for the Southern
Federal District, Dmitriy Kozak. In 2007, now under close
scrutiny from Moscow, Dagestan could not avoid the party
system imposed from the center. The Dagestani elites have
had to find other ways to resolve disputes. Elections become
a tool in the process, but not the process itself.


7. (C) Not that the parties of the Center have any illusions
that Dagestan politics have much to do with national party
politics. As the leader of the Union of Rightist Forces
(SPS) told us after his party was disqualified from running
in the March 11 election for the Republic's Parliament, "We
picked the wrong warlord." Moscow's main interest has been
to ensure that there is a veneer of national politics --
however thin -- over the power struggles internal to Dagestan.


8. (C) Seven parties nominally competed in the elections.
However, all members of the four main factions vying for
power -- and everyone else who matters -- were members of
United Russia, the Kremlin's party of power. The factions
break down as follows:

-- First is Said Amirov, still Mayor of Makhachkala and still
the most powerful warlord in the country. But he is under
threat. He was the main muscle for "Grandfather" Magomedali
Magomedov, like Amirov an ethnic Dargin. "The Grandfather"
faced opposition from the Avars, who believed that as the
largest ethnic group they should have had the presidency.
Amirov defended Magomedov. But tensions arose between the
two of them, as Amirov made it plain that he thought "The
Grandfather" had agreed to repay the favor by stepping aside
in a timely way and letting Amirov take over. Magomedov had
no such plans.

-- Thus there is friction between Amirov and the second
group, the faction nominally headed by "The Grandfather's"
son Magomedsalam Magomedov, now speaker of Parliament, but
with "The Grandfather" in the wings as consigliere. The two
groups are vying both for the leadership of the Dargins and
the political legacy of "The Grandfather." Meanwhile, now
that there is an Avar President, Amirov is gradually being
deprived of his access to "budgetary resources" (i.e., direct
theft from subventions paid from Moscow),rent-seeking
opportunities, and patronage.

-- The third group is that of the current president, Mukhu
Aliyev. Aliyev is a strange character for Dagestan:
technocratic, not corrupt, not willing to play the political
game the way "The Grandfather" used to. As one of our guides
to Dagestani political life put it, under Magomedov, life was
simple. You wanted a lucrative government job, you paid
Magomedov the agreed price, and the job was yours. Now,
under Aliyev, those who have jobs are supposed to work at
them, not just make money by using their office. Those who
work badly are replaced. Rent-seekers find this innovation
disquieting. Aliyev is the head of United Russia in
Dagestan, and he controls the United Russia ticket. His is
the only group using only one party. Those he picked for
parliament are, like him, technocrats.

-- The fourth force is the so-called "Northern Alliance."
This is a group of powerful Avar warlords from the northern
tier of the Avar country - the non-mountainous

MOSCOW 00001394 003 OF 006


Khasavyurt-Kizlyar region, as opposed to the original Avar
homeland in the high mountains of the country's west. The
Alliance was deeply opposed to Magomedov, and its members are
eager to show their loyalty to and support for their
fellow-Avar, Mukhu Aliyev, even though he was not their
candidate for president. They are so eager, in fact, that
they perform services for him that he has not even asked for.



9. (C) Aliyev tries to keep his distance from the Alliance.
In the current elections, one of the Alliance's strongmen,
Sagid Murtazaliyev, was running for district chief of
Kizlyar. Murtazaliyev really is a strongman, having been an
Olympic and World Champion weightlifter. Aliyev, conscious
that Moscow is always looking over his shoulder, opposed
Murtazaliyev's election: Kizlyar is a largely ethnic Russian
district, it has always had Russian district chiefs, and
Aliyev declared that he would prefer to see a Russian elected
this time as well. But Murtazaliyev not only won in Kizlyar;
he also got a kinsman elected district chief of the Tsumada
district, in the western mountains, from which his clan
stems.


10. (C) In addition, Aliyev is responsible to Moscow for the
quality of his party list. So, for example, it would have
looked bad for the two brothers of Northern Alliance grandee
Gadzhi Makhachev, Duma representative for Makhachkala, to run
on the United Russia ticket. Neither they nor Gadzhi fit
the technocratic mold that Moscow wants to see. So Gadzhi
put them on the Just Russia ticket, running against his own
party. There was another reason Gadzhi did this: he ran his
younger brother in Amirov's home district, trying to use his
influence to reduce Amirov's vote.


11. (C) The elections held on March 11 served a purpose for
these four factions, not just for Moscow. They were the
first chance the factions have had to demonstrate their
relative strength in the new power alignment that came into
being with the retirement of "The Grandfather." True to the
dictum of Soso the Sage of the Caucasus, their strength is
shown not in the numbers of those who cast votes, but in the
numbers of ballots that are counted.

The Casting, the Counting...
--------------


12. (C) The elections proceeded in four phases. First, the
clans infiltrated their candidates into all the party lists
and start to gain support for their own candidates and
destroy their opponents' support. Amirov, while himself
firmly on the United Russia ticket (all factions want Kremlin
support),started financing candidates on the Union of
Rightist Forces (SPS) ticket (he was the "wrong warlord" to
whom the party's Moscow leader referred above). The Northern
Alliance made a successful countermove: through a
combination of pressure, influence, disincentives (some of
them involving automatic weapons) and incentives, three SPS
candidates were disqualified. This wiped the entire ticket
off the ballot for parliament, though SPS remained on the
ballot for local councils and district chiefs. And then
there were six.


13. (C) At this point we should describe the six:

-- As mentioned, United Russia (YeR) is the Kremlin's party
of power and also the party of the president of Dagestan. As
the party of power, most of the powerful belong to it,
regardless of what ticket they run on.

-- Just Russia (SR) is the second Kremlin Party of power, and
has the advantage that Dagestan's president does not control
the ticket. Thus it is a home for warlords, grandees and
other powerful folks who might be an embarrassment on the YeR
ticket. As we mentioned, Gadzhi Makhachev ran his two
brothers on this ticket. Another colorful figure of SR is a
Mountain Jew from Derbent named Sergey Pinkhasov; Makhachev
appears to be a patron of the Derbent Jewish community, one
having been among the boys he financed to attend a military
high school in San Diego.

-- The Agrarians and Communists are traditional parties in
Dagestan. The Agrarians still have some strong figures in
their party, but the communists have lost steadily since
1996, when Zyuganov, the Communist candidate, received 70
percent of Dagestan's vote in the first round of the election
(he only received 30 percent in the run-off against Yeltsin,
leading most observers to conclude that the second round of
the election had seen the application of traditional Caucasus
political technologies). The Communists are left with party
activists, but no money; however, they appeared to have some
money in the final days of the campaign, and observers

MOSCOW 00001394 004 OF 006


strongly suspected this came from Amirov.

-- The Liberal Democratic Party (LDPR),like the SPS, was
initially disqualified from the race for parliament.
However, that decision was reversed after Zhirinovskiy made a
personal plea to Makhachev. That was a safe move, since a
Great Russian chauvinist party had no chances of making
inroads in overwhelmingly non-Russian Dagestan.

-- The Patriots are a largely regional party, known to
represent the interests of the Lezgins and related
nationalities in the usually overlooked southern part of the
country. Representing a disgruntled electoral base, the
Patriots were a good vehicle for all disgruntled Dagestanis
in a Republic whose social injustice and gap between rich and
poor is high even by Russian standards. The Patriots were
impoverished, but suddenly received massive infusions of
cash, known to be from Makhachkala Mayor Amirov (by
unofficial count, the Patriots appear to have taken 20% of
the vote in Makhachkala, drawing on support much broader than
the Lezgin diaspora there).


14. (C) After the first phase, before election day, came the
elections themselves on March 11. The usual abuses were
reported - bought votes, busloads moving from precinct to
precinct and voting in all of them, ballot stuffing, etc.
The third phase was the counting and preparation of the vote
protocols in the precincts. These provided an opportunity
for party machine hacks to show their loyalty to their bosses
by ensuring that the "right" party or parties got an
appropriate vote count. The fourth phase was the preparation
of the republic-wide results, in which the original protocols
were amended to reflect the results of post-counting
negotiations among the principal forces.


15. (C) But here a new, fifth phase has interjected itself:
the negotiation with Moscow. Results must be acceptable to
the Kremlin, and this means making sure that they don't look
ridiculous and that they satisfy (i.e., silence) the outraged
complaints of national parties such as the Communists. This
phase seems to have taken at least a week, as the final
results came out well after those of the rest of the regions
that voted. In the initial vote count, neither the
Communists nor the Patriots passed the 7% barrier for
representation in Parliament (Communists were given 5.47%,
Patriots 6.1%),though both undoubtedly did better. A Lezgin
expert was convinced, for example, that in this phase Said
Amirov would "trade" the performance of the Patriots for
concessions on the conduct and results of the State Duma
elections at the end of this year. In the event, however,
the Patriots were allowed to squeak through with 7.07% of the
vote, and the Communists received 7.12%. This was done by
shaving percentages off other parties. In the preliminary
count, YeR received 65.67%; the final count gave them 63.81%.
SR went from 11.48% to 10.74%; and the Agrarians from 9.16
to 9.12.

...And the Accounting
--------------


16. (C) But what of the real results - changes in the balance
of power among the leading political groupings? Amirov came
out slightly down. He managed to get the Patriots into
Parliament, but lost heavily on his backing of SPS. Though
he won in his district (turning his seat down to retain his
executive position),his majority (in the preliminary count)
"only" approached 70%, well below most of the unchallenged
YeR stalwarts. This was due to competition from the younger
brother of Amirov's blood rival, Gadzhi Makhachev, running on
the JR ticket. Amirov may also have lost out to the other
Dargin faction, the one headed by the "Grandfather's" son,
Magomedsalam Magomedov. In one race for district chief,
Amirov's protg lost big to a supporter of Magomedov. This
conclusion must be treated gingerly, however, because the
report of this race comes in an anti-Amirov newspaper;
perhaps it played up the defeat for Amirov while glossing
over his victories elsewhere.


17. (C) Northern Alliance grandee Gadzhi Makhachev managed to
elect a second brother in Khasavyurt, also running on the SR
ticket - a demonstration that even running in opposition to
his own party he could deliver votes loyal to himself
personally. As we mentioned, Makhachev's fellow Ally in the
Northern Alliance, Sagid Murtazaliyev, had a very good day.
On the whole, the Northern Alliance seems to have done well.


18. (C) It is unclear how President Mukhu Aliyev came out.
His technocrats will fill the majority of parliamentary
seats, which is perhaps all he cares about: his obvious goal
in the elections was to ensure a base of support independent
from the clan systems either of his fellow Avars or of other

MOSCOW 00001394 005 OF 006


ethnic groups.


19. (C) How did Moscow come out? On the whole, not too
badly. As mentioned above, Moscow had no illusions that
Dagestani politics could be made to resemble national
politics. The Center just wanted to keep the place out of
the news, keep the voting non-violent, and at the end of a
day be able to say that local officials, councils and a
parliament were elected; this modest ambition was achieved.
The inclusion of the Communists in Parliament seems to have
silenced national press coverage, and few in Moscow pay
attention to the Dagestani media.

One Man, One Problem
--------------


20. (C) But one of the main power problems of Dagestan
remains unresolved and unaddressed by the elections:
longtime Minister of Internal Affairs Adilgirey
Magomedtagirov. Magomedtagirov is a colorful figure, a
high-mountain Avar from the west, big and strong, with great
presence, who long ago made a name for himself as police
chief in the ethnically Azeri trading city of Derbent, near
the Azerbaijani border. Derbent's culture was, like the
Azeris, softer and more commercial than the rest of Dagestan,
and Magomedtagirov proved extremely effective in ridding the
town of known criminals. His technique was simple: he
picked them up, planted narcotics on them, threw them in
jail, and let them rot. No man, no problem. As Minister of
Internal Affairs, his current targets are Islamic radicals,
for whom he has devised different tactics: he has vowed that
their cases will be terminated before they ever get to court.
But that is not the cause of the current problems in the
power structure.


21. (C) Magomedtagirov, an Avar, was perfect as Minister
under the Dargin leader "Grandfather" Magomedov.
Magomedtagirov was "The Grandfather's" counterweight to the
Dargin warlord and Makhachkala Mayor Amirov. But
Magomedtagirov also protected "The Grandfather" against the
Northern Alliance, who represented a different part of the
Avar lands. That delicate balance changed once Mukhu Aliyev,
an Avar, became President. Having two Avars in such high
posts is considered an unsustainable disbalance of the
system. So Aliyev prepared to demand Magomedtagirov's
resignation and put in his place his Dargin deputy, another
strong personality. By pure coincidence, however, the deputy
was targeted by two assassination attempts, the second of
which succeeded. No man, no problem.


22. (C) This left Magomedtagirov in place, and finding a
successor now grew problematic. So various methods have been
employed to force him out. First, an unprecedented strike
and demonstration took place in Makhachkala: the MVD's OMON
regiment walked out and demanded Magormedtagirov be sacked.
It is generally assumed that the only person who could have
arranged this action is Makhachkala mayor Said Amirov. When
this didn't work, a more direct solution was attempted. In
the last few months Magomedtagirov has been the target of
several assassination attempts, all of which he has survived.
One was a complicated plot by people who evidently had
enormous amounts of power and money: the local MVD chief in
the Buynaksk district was assassinated, and as expected
Magomedtagirov and his associates got in their cars and
rushed off to the scene of the crime. The main road to
Buynaksk being just by chance closed for repairs, the convoy
had to use a more circular road through the mountains, where
they ran into an ambush: a huge mine blasted one of the cars
apart and gunmen were waiting to shoot the survivors.
Unluckily for the plotters, they blew up the wrong car and
Magomedtagirov shot his way out.


23. (C) So Dagestan still has the men, and still has the
problem. The elections seem to have left the basic power
struggle unaffected, but analysts believe the cards are
stacked against Makhachkala Mayor Amirov. He is not only
faced with opposition from all the Avar factions - the
Northern Alliance, the President, the Minister of Internal
Affairs - but also with competition against Magomedsalam
Magomedov for leadership of the Dargins. Amirov has two
things going for him, however. First, he is considered the
most ruthless warlord in Dagestan, which is really saying
something. Second, he knows that the moment he leaves office
there is nowhere on the face of the earth that can hide him -
and his entire family - from the murderous blood revenge of
his many enemies. Amirov has absolutely nothing to lose to
fight to the death. And Dagestani politics, for some time to
come, will be ruled less by elections than by the first part
of the philosopher Soso Jugashvili's dictum: "Death solves
all problems."


MOSCOW 00001394 006 OF 006



RUSSELL