Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 19 – Two developments
this week – the creation of a “Russian
International” to organize ethnic Russians abroad and discussions about the establishment
of a “Party of the Regions” in Latvia – suggest that some in the Russian
capital consider the approach they have pushed in Ukraine a model for what they
could do elsewhere.
As Nazaccent.ru reported yesterday,
citing Baltij.eu and “Kommersant,” a group of ethnic Russian activists from
Ukraine, Moldova and Estonia and Aleksey Zhuravlyev, a Duma deputy who heads
the Rodina Party, are scheduled to sign a declaration today about the creation of a
Russian International in Moscow (nazaccent.ru/content/10663-v-moskve-sozdadut-russkij-internacional.html, baltija.eu/news/read/36381 and kommersant.ru/doc/2407075).
To
be known as the RusIntern, a name which echoes the Soviet-era Comintern, the group’s
organizers calls for the formation of a single party across the former Soviet
space and in Europe of all those who value the Russian language and culture are
dear, who will seek official status for Russian in the EU and who are prepared
to struggle “against manifestations of fascism, extremism, and Russophobia.”
The
group’s slogan is “Russians of all countries, unite!” yet another ethnicized
echo of the Soviet past.
Zhurvalyev for his part told “Kommersant:”
“In the course o the current color revolutions, we are very much losing in the
information war. There is the ‘Voice of America’ in Ukrainian, but ‘the Voices
of Russia’ are not heard there in principle.
To improve things, we need a special ministry of propaganda; these
things must be regulated at the state level.”
And the Rodina leader added that
steps must be taken to end unacceptable situations like the one which he said
now obtains in Moldova: There, “citiens who support the idea of joining the Customs
Union are declared enemies of the motherland while the Romanian police already
have the right to act freely on Moldovan territories.”
Meanwhile, last Saturday, a congress
of the Regional Alliance in Latvia announced its electoral program. According
to Rubaltic.ru, the party is now “a classic party of the regions, a political
force which will speak in the name of the districts and self-administrations of
Latvia by expressing their economic interests in opposition to the Center” (rubaltic.ru/article/politika-i-obshchestvo/partiya-regionov-kakim-budet-regionalnyy-alyans-v-latviyskoy-politike12022014/).
The analyst says that he and other observers have some doubts about the
group because “the Latvian provinces which it unites are precisely that:”
depressed areas which receive aid but which are “dying” because of the flight
of their residents to Riga and abroad. The money and the budget are in Riga.
If
Latvia’s version of the party of the regions is to be successful, it will have
to position itself as a party of the left: “It must demand not the self-sufficiency
of the regions but on the contrary an increase of their financing from the
state budget.” Such demands may lead people to speak about new “red lines” in
Latvia, just as some spoke about “red belts” elsewhere.
Nosovich
doesn’t say, but it is clear from his comments that such a party could become a
pro-Moscow operation precisely because of its demands and because of the
Russian government’s interest not only in weakening neighboring states but also
its support, at least beyond its borders, of those who have suffered most from
the collapse of communism.
Exactly
what will happen with either the RusIntern or the Latvian version of Ukraine’s
Party of the Regions is far from clear. But they potentially give Moscow yet
another way to influence the domestic affairs of neighboring countries and one
that the Russian authorities can use even while plausibly denying
responsibility.
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