Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 10 – Allowing the
North Caucasus to become independent -- a move that a majority of ethnic
Russians now support -- would mean the end of the Putin system in Russia and
thus would open the way to a better future for country, according to Aleksey
Shiropayev, a leading Russian nationalist writer.
In a posting on his blog this week,
Shiropayev says that the growing support among ethnic Russians for letting the
North Caucasus go represents “a fact of enormous significance” because it means
that Russians now recognize the “civilizational incompatibility” of the North
Caucasians and the Russians (shiropaev.livejournal.com/244320.html).
“The
Petersburg of Pushkin and Brodsky and the Moscow of Bulgakov and Yesenin cannot
exist in the framework of a single federation with Kadyrov’s Chechnya, which
lives according to shariat and with Daghestan which keeps cloning fanatic
suicide bombers,” Shiropayev says.
And it is the recognition of this, “spontaneously
and possibly not [yet] completely,” by the citizens of the Russian Federation
that shows the “basic European self-identification of a large portion of the
[ethnic] Russian people.” In short, “the
Russians are saying that we are Europeans and we want to live in a European
way.”
“Beyond doubt,”
he says, “the sharp growth in demands to separate the North Caucasus are
indisputable testimony of qualitative progress in Russian self-consciousness,”
steps driven not by “’xenophobia’” but “above all by the evident fact that
post-Soviet Russians ever more are affected by the values of the civilized world
against which the North Caucasus has set itself.”
“The relative
economic freedom, the relative broad access to information, and the possibility
to travel to the West is having its effect,” Shiropayev continues. “To the
horror of the retrograde patriots, Russian self-consciousness is being
transformed slowly but surely ‘being reset’ and becoming more western and
contemporary.”
The “criminal” and “medieval” North
Caucasus, on the other hand, has been converted into “a conglomerate of eastern
despotisms, ever more foreign and hostile to Russian society,” even though they
reflect the values of the current Kremlin leadership and are ever more generous
in supporting those despots.
Putin’s Kremlin and Kadyrov’s
Chechnya share “an archaic quality, ‘an Asianism,’ and a faith in fear, force
and corruption as the moving forces of the social system,” Shiropaev argues.
Moreover, “the negative attitude of the Russian authorities to normal people like
Yushchenko and Saakashvili” has made this clear given the Kremlin’s “great
friendship with Kadyrov.”
“Like is drawn to like,” of course,
the Russian analyst says, and “besides, the North Caucasus is if you will he
only true force support of the Kremlin in the event of a political crisis.”
If the North Caucasus is detached from
the Russian Federation by “the will of the people of Russia,” that will mean the
overthrow of the exiting regime which once can call Putinism,” he writes. But more than that, it will mark Russia’s
rejection of “the current quasi-imperial model and the shift to genuine
federalism.”
With the North Caucasus beyond the borders
of the Russian Federation, he insists, Russia society already will not remain
what it was. It will free itself from many stereotypes and survivals of the
past, above all those concerning a great power and imperial nature.” And it
will mean that Russians will begin to free themselves from the idea that large
size is “an undoubted good and of unqualified value.”
“Having crossed the Rubicon of the
separation of the North Caucasus,” Shiropayev argues, “Russian society will no
longer view the idea of the formation within the Russian Federation of seven
[ethnic] Russian republics” as something by foreign powers to weaken them and
their country.
“On the contrary, Russians will be
opened to the constructive nature of this idea” and to the possibilities of “reconstructing”
the existing Russian Federation into a real United States of Russia,” a country
that would be “immeasurably closer to Euro-Atlantic civilization than is the
current Russian Federation.”
According to Shiropayev, Tatarstan and
Bashkortostan would fit into this arrangement as “democratic and secular states
with a non-aggressive and moderate variant of Islam.”
Meanwhile, if this happens, the North
Caucasus, no longer receiving Moscow’s subventions will descend into further
wildness. Russians will think about it, Shiropayev suggests, “only when the
plans of the United States of Russia carry out their next strike on the bases
of Islamists in Chechnya or Daghestan” or “when some band or other tries to
cross into” Russia.
Moreover, in such a scenario, there will
be a place for the Cosssacks, Shiropayev concludes. They can “till the land and
bear arms “just like Israeli settlers.”
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