Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 4 – The inter-ethnic
situation in the Russian Federation is currently so bad and deteriorating so
rapidly that the country faces “the horrors of Germany of 1933” and the
disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991, according to Vladimir Mukusev, a
prominent Russian journalist.
In an interview with VIPcomments and
the Novy Region2 news agency, Mukusev argues that the government’s program for
strengthening national unity is too small and that the funds allocated to it
won’t be spent as intended. This
failure, he suggests, “can lead to very serious negative consequences” (nr2.ru/moskow/463525.html).
According to the journalist, Russians
are “again approaching the situation of the 1990s when the country stood before
the necessity of making as its chief national project and not ‘one of many’ the
national idea of the unity of the country.”
All the ethnic problems around the Russian Federation are not “local”
issues but “the problem of the unity of the country.”
That is because any one of clashes
now viewed in isolation, Mukusev argues, could in the right circumstances trigger
far larger problems for the country.
He says that “the national
republics within Russia under existing circumstances sooner or later will seek”
independence. “Serious nationalist
circles in our Muslim countries, our states in parts of our Russia will say: ‘Enough!
We do not want to hear” only about the Russians. “We have our own economy, our
own statehood, our own language, our own religion.”
Consequently, they will say, “Lord
Moscow, go away from us as far as possible.” In order to avoid that outcome, he
argues, Russia needs to set up a new ministry for nationality affairs. If it
doesn’t, there is little that it can do to avoid disintegration.
But that is not the only kind of
ethnic threat Russia now faces. History has shown what happens to countries
where “inter-ethnic conflicts are resolved by the creation of armed
druzhinniki, storm troopers and the like.”
Such countries “pay in blood.” Unless Moscow intervenes in a most
serious way, Russia could become “the Germany of 1933.”
Those twin problems and the risk
that both will get worse in the coming months are intensified by to other
trends: the inevitability of an economic crisis because of Russia’s almost
complete dependence on foreign countries for its economic well-being and the
new outburst of political activism from below, especially in the regions.
The mayoralty election in Moscow
didn’t help Sergey Sobyanin much, but it has made Aleksey Navalny a political
star even though he lost, and the vote for Yevgeny Royzman in Yekaterinburg
shows that new political forces are emerging, forces that threaten the existing
power arrangements and therefore are likely to provoke conflict.
And Mukusev adds that a trigger may
be the way in which the Sochi Olympics is being handled. Everyone wants to put
the best face on things for visitors, but the process in this case has
converted the Olympiad into “a field of battle for politicians.” There is
probably little that can be done to stop this now, but Mukusev says people need
to tep back and “stop this stupidity.”
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