Paul Goble
Staunton,
May 16 – In thinking about Russia’s future, most of the country’s opposition
figures remain trapped in the old debate about whether Russia is fundamentally
European or really Asiatic, but, one Moscow commentator argues, it is time to
recognize that “the successful Russia of the future” can and must be a country
like the United States.
In
an article on the “Osobaya bukhva” portal yesterday, Roman Popkov says that
those opposition figures “who consider themselves to be on the left” want a
Eurosocialist Russia. Those on the right want a Thatcherite one. And those who
don’t want to give themselves away talk “abstractly about Europe” (specletter.com/obcshestvo/2013-05-15/otkroju-vam-ameriku-pro-rossiju.html).
Thus,
he adds, “Navalny loves to talk about Russia as Europe. Belkovsky calls the
participants in the protest movement Russian Europeans. Pavel Pryanikov is a ‘Euro-socialist,’
and the national democrats are inspired with love for Estonia and Poland.” But
all talk as if Russia must become European because they do not want it to be
Asiatic, the only choice they acknowledge.
But
in fact there is an alternative. Not the “’special Russian third war’” that
Kurginyan and Dugin talk about, but rather the American, something that becomes
obvious, Popkov argues, if one considers how different Russia is from European
countries and how similar it is to the United States in some very important
respects.
“I
cannot imagine that Moscow will ever just as much in common with Makhachkala as
Paris does with Orleans,” Popkov writes. But “I can imagine that Moscow could
resemble a mixture of Washington and New York. It might be better to build
another capital and let Moscow be New York, a city of businessmen,
corporations, [and] theaters” and then “Makhchakala can be not Orleans but New
Orleans,” an ethnically distinct place very different from the center.
It
is difficult to imagine “Russia as a European country” given the nature of
Europe today “in comparison with former times, a continent with few ambitions
and not driven by any passionate goal. But it is not hard to imagine Russia as
a second America, and consequently, “in contrast to the Petrine era, we need to
open a window to the United States.”
Russian
are far more similar to Americans than they are to Europeans, Popkov insists.
Both are “people of a historic mission.” Both are “condemned to feel themselves
Romans” in the classical sense. And while Americans may not know geography,
they feel just as Russians do that their forces can dominate any country, go
anywhere and do anything.
Both
countries have “an enormous, complex social and economic geography.” Both have
subjugated primitive peoples in the name of building a state. The only
different is that Russian “pioneers went east and [American] pioneers went
toward the sunset, but [the places they occupied] were equally wild and empty.”
Both
Russians and Americans, Popkov says, “have a feeling of regionalism” and a
sense of being “a single whole.” Both “have been involved in the construction
of a civic, political nation which unites people of different national and
racial origins in the framework of a single civilizational model under a common
flag,” with the Americans having been somewhat more successful in this than the
Russians.
And
despite all the talk about Russian collectivism, both nations are
individualistic in the extreme, albeit of a somewhat different kind. Because of the trauma of the country’s defeat
in the Cold War, Russian individualism has become distorted and “mixed together
with [a false and distorted] patriotism,” something that needs to be combatted
if Russia is to move forward.
Properly
understood, Russians are rugged individualists too, and while some remain mired
in anger about defeat, “the greater part of Russians want their country to be
great no less than do their counterparts in the United States.” That is something that the Russian opposition
needs to recognize and act upon.
It
is long past time to “replace the propaganda falsehoods of Putin with a real
strategy of building a New Russia as a strong and free super power from ocean
to ocean” rather than behave like a small European country or still worse an
Asiatic despotism. That will require
many things, including a Bill of Rights that enshrines “the right of the people
to revolt against tyranny.”
And it is long
past time, Popkov concludes, to “kill” the urge for revenge among Russians and to
“create a symphony of healthy individualism, inalienable civic freedoms and
faithfulness tot eh Motherland.” That is what real “sovereign democracy” looks
like “so to speak according to the American model.”
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