Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 16 – Russian
nationalists obsessed with the supposed spread of Islamist extremism across the
Russian Federation represent a real “fifth column,” whose works can best be
described as “provocations” that threaten to provoke what their authors say
they most fear, the disintegration of the country, according to Academician
Valery Tishkov.
To prevent that
from happening, the director of the
Moscow Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology says, genuine scholars need to
speak out about the distortions and other shortcomings of these works lest many
come to accept them as true and act accordingly, driving ever more Muslims into
the arms of the radicals (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/225549/).
Tishkov’s
remarks, to a June 5 roundtable organized jointly by the Central Museum of
Contemporary History and the Historical-Philological Section of the Russian
Academy of Sciences, were published only on June 14. They were in response to
the appearance in mid-May of a 54-page report by the Moscow Institute of
National Strategy.
That study,
entitled “A Map of Ethno-Religious Threats: The North Caucasus and the Middle
Volga,” purported to show that radical Islamist ideas had spread from the North
Caucasus to the Muslims of the Middle Volga in the first instance and were now found
in almost all parts of the Russian Federation. (See apn.ru/userdata/files/ethno/Ethnodoc-new-full-sm.pdf).
Not
surprisingly, this report sparked concern among many Russians in various parts
of the country and equally sharp rejoinders from the leaders of Tatarstan,
Bashkortostan, and other Muslim republics who said that the report’s claims
were not true and that, unchallenged, they risked exacerbating inter-religious
and inter-ethnic hostility.
In his remarks, which appear to be a
response to such concerns, the Russian scholar said that the report of the
Institute of National Strategy was “a provocation” and that he would like to
know “the strategy of which nation is that institute devising” because in his
view, it is clearly not that of the Russian nation, however defined.
“There exists ‘a fifth column,’
which presents itself as consisting of patriot and which does everything it can
to denigrate the representatives of the national borderlands,” Tishkov
continued. “This is a serious problem for the country because such people and
such reports can promote the process of disintegration.”
Other participants at the roundtable
and an increasing number of Russian scholars have picked up that theme.
Speaking at the roundtable, one scholar pointed out that “there is an enormous
quantity of pseudo-scientific works on the history of the Caucasus” and urged
the establishment of “a commission on the history” of that region to assess
them.
And last week, Elena Suponina, the
head of the Center for Asia and the Middle East at the Russian Institute for
Strategic Research, said on Moscow TV Center that the report Tishkov had
criticized “has more in common with propaganda and provocations than with
expertise” on its supposed subject (islamnews.ru/news-140194.html).
“The threat of
terrorism and separatism exists not only in the Russian Federation but is
intensifying throughout the world,” Suponina said. “But these problems are so sensitive, above
all when they involve religion that the slightest step to the side and you land
in a minefield where an explosion is possible.
And this is very dangerous.”
Those who prepared the May report,
she suggested, “dealt with these problems like an elephant in a china shop”
significantly oversimplifying the situation and thus making false
conclusions. “To say,” as the authors
do, “that Wahhabism appeared only in order to dismember the Ottoman Empire is
from the historical point of view completely incorrect.”
And to treat “horses and people and
Wahhabis and Salafites and Muslim Brothers and Jihadists” as if they are all
the same is yet another mistake,” on that might be “forgivable” in the case of
an ordinary observer, but “for an expert, such a simplification has more in
common with propaganda and provocations” and is thus “impermissible.”
Moreover, Suponina said, “the
authors call some of their ideological opponents recruits of some foreign
special services and agents of influence. Good gentlemen, we do not want to be
returned to 1937. And do not forget that this can boomerang against you. Today, they are agents of influence and
tomorrow you are a Trotskyite or Bukharinist, and perhaps then you too will
have to be sent to Kolyma?”
The May report even contains
passages, she noted, “where the Wahhabis are called the comrades in arms and
virtually the same as those who took part in the Bolotnaya Square” protests. “I
do not belong to one or the other, but from such comparisons, nothing good will
come.”
“When suggesting that the Russian
Federation is an empire and then offering the example of all previous empires
which without exception in the report have collapsed,” she concludes, “the
impression is created that the authors have no doubts that we are entering the
final stage of this collapse and that Russia is falling apart before our
eyes. They themselves have no doubt
about this! But those who come out to protest corruption, they also are
Wahhabis.”
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