Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 30 – Russian
nationalists today often call for the formation of a genuinely ethnic Russian
Republic but, because they do not have a vision of how it might be created,
most of them are insisting on the destruction of the non-Russian republics of
the Russian Federation in order to increase the status of their nation,
according to a Moscow commentator.
But despite the obvious problems
with creating a Russian Republic – the attitudes of ethnic Russians about their
territory, their state-centered ideology, and the intermixture of ethnic groups
across the country – Maksim Sobesky suggests that at some point the creation of
that new state could be possible (nazaccent.ru/content/7199-russkaya-respublika-mechty-i-realnost.html).
In
an essay entitled “A Russian Republic – Myths and Reality,” Sobesky surveys the
current thinking about this possibility and argues that so far Russians have
not advanced very far toward defining it and thus are increasingly committed to
“liquidating the other national autonomies” because they do not have one of
their own.
Before
the Bolshevik revolution, the commentator argues, “the small peoples” – and he
lists the Finns and the Poles – “used their rights for the preservation of
cultural distinctions.” And he suggests, although much evidence points in an
alternative direction, that there was little “separatism” among them or others.
After
1917, however, the Bolsheviks for “populist” reasons “created dozens of
autonomous republics and designated their borders in an extremely arbitrary
manner.” These republics included significant numbers of ethnic Russians and
large portions of purely ethnically Russian lands.
That
allowed Moscow to control these entities, especially through the CPSU
organization. But with the end of party
rule and the departure of many ethnic Russians from these republics, Moscow no
longer has this “administrative lever,” and Russian is therefore confronted by “separatist
attitudes” and other “’ethnic’ problems.”
In 1991, in 14 of the non-Russian
republics of the RSFSR, the titular nationality formed less than half of the
population, and in others, only slightly more. But now, “two decades later, “the
number of ethnic Russians has fallen sharply in all Caucasus republics and in
Tuva.” And “experts do not exclude that soon these republics will become
mono-ethnic.”
That pattern and that prospect has
sparked a discussion among ethnic Russian nationalists about the need for “reforms”
of the existing system, reforms that they believe are entirely justified
because few foreign states offer their minorities ethno-territorial autonomies
but instead expect them to assimilate or at least acculturate.
Such discussion has been intensified
because Moscow refuses to recognize the ethnic Russians as the state-forming
nation and continues to disperse Russian nationalist meetings even as
separatist attitudes among non-Russians grow. In fact, Sobesky adds, “foreigners
are beginning to conceive of the national republics as independent states.”
He then proceeds to survey the
opinions of various Russian nationalist groupings on this issue. The
state-oriented right, such as Velikay Rossiya and Russkiye, want to maintain
control over the minorities but reduce their status. The NDP argues that “it is time to stop ‘feeding
the Caucasus’ and let the Caucasus republics survive,” if they can, on their
own.
Left-of-center nationalists in
Volnitsa call for a referendum on autonomy. Drugaya Rossiya, says the North
Caucasians should have the right “to live by the laws of traditional adat.” And Eduard Limonov, Sobesky continues, has
proposed stripping Chechnya and Daghestan of Cossack lands, while the Cossacks
seek the restoration of tsarist-era divisions.
In addition, he says, there are “nationalist-regionalists”
who talk about independence for Leningrad oblast or Siberia. Such attitudes in recent years have gone from
being little more than “ordinary Internet gabbing” to “an entire cultural
movement.” They can be dismissed only at Moscow’s peril.
To date, Russian nationalists
have not united on the issue of an ethnic Russian Republic any more than they
have on a variety of other issues. The most specific programs have come from
the RNE and Pamyat groups who respectively call for the formation of a purely
Russian republic and the unification to Russia of ethnic Russian regions in
neighboring countries.
The National Democratic Party
speaks in its program about ensuring equal rights for predominantly ethnic
Russian regions and the non-Russian republics, but some of its members “deny
the presence of an [ethnic] Russian nation and propagandize for the splitting
apart of the country into independent states.”
Velikaya Rossiya, Sobesky notes in
concluding his survey, urges the creation of “a unitary Russian state” and the
re-unification of ethnic Russian lands” now in neighboring states. Russkiye calls for a revision of internal
borders, the liquidation of some non-Russian republics, and limits on internal
migration into Russian areas from non-Russian ones.
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