Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 28 – Russian society
is experiencing euphoria over what Vladimir Putin proclaims and many of them
feel: With the seizure of Crimea, Russia has regained “the status of a great
power.” But Moscow commentators that warn
it is far easier to claim or even believe Russia is again a great power than it
is for the country to “retain” that status.
And they suggest that what will be
required for that to happen, according to a survey of opinion of Svetlana
Gomzikova of the “Svobodnaya pressa” portal, will require not just money and
military victories but the kind of changes in Russia that the Putin regime has
been unwilling to make (svpressa.ru/society/article/84527/).
“In the final analysis,” she says, “euphoria
over the unification of Crimea” with the Russian Federation “will pass, but the
problems” that Russia faces “will remain in
place” because the “status” of a world power won’t “feed” anyone, pay
the bills or even allow the country to remain that for very long.
Vladimir Shevchenko, a senior scholar at
the Moscow Institute of Philosophy, tells Gomzikova that “Russia can exist only
as a great power. Or it will not exist at all.
This is an axiom which has been confirmed over the course of the centuries
of all our history. But in reality, [such a] status doesn’t feed anyone. And it
must be confirmed by actions.”
Among those actions, he suggests,
are the following: “rapid re-industrialization,” “the de-offshore-ization of
the economy,” and “the creation of an integral conception of development above
all for Siberia and the Far East.” He continues that given the failure of “liberal-market
doctrine,” Russia needs to put a different doctrine in place.
“Many already today understand,” Shevchenko continues, “the state must all
the same be returned to the economy and correctly mark out the basic directions
of development. Business perhaps will decide some partial tasks, but it isn’t
solving the main ones.” Among those is moving into the sixth technological
generation.
The
US, Germany and Japan have already done so and are developing on the basis of
nano-technologies, bio-technologies, information technologies, and convection
technologies, he says. But Russia is “still”
just starting in all of these areas. The
country must devote “all its forces” to achieve a breakthrough.
The
West won’t be able to prevent that even if it employs sanctions. It is simply impossible “to isolate Russia
the way the Soviet Union was isolated at the end of the 1940s and in the 1950s.”
China, Japan, Southeast Asia, India and Iran will all continue to work with
Russia if Moscow sets the tasks for change.
Anatoly
Stepanov, a historian who edits the Orthodox Russkaya Narodnaya Liniya portal,
says that the most important thing Crimea has done is to give Russians “inspiration,”
a sense that they can do things on their own and despite obstacles. That had
been missing in recent years to Russia’s and Russians’ detriment.
Crimea
also has helped overcome another problem Russia has suffered from over the last
20 years, Stepanov says, the widespread feeling that “the people and supreme
power were separated from each other.” That meant that the authorities could
not draw on the energy of the population, and the population felt in some ways
alienated from their rulers.
In
the wake of Crimea, he continues, the national consciousness of Russians has
been renewed, “and before the authorities stands the most important task of
preserving that.” The reason is obvious: Russians have been inspired before,
only to be let down and thus alienated from the authorities. One need only look at the trajectory from
1914 to 1917.
And Valery
Skurlatov, who works at the Moscow Institute for Innovative Development, says
that Crimea was important but that Crimea alone has not allowed Russia to
recover its status as a great power.
That will only be possible if the country undergoes “modernization.”
Relying on raw materials leaves it part of the “raw materials periphery” and
subject to “foreign markets.”
Because of the
Russia of today has not made that transition, “it is still early to speak about
the return of the status of a great power.”
But Crimea could help. It could become an example and a stimulus for the
rest of Russia, “a special Russian enclave,” even “’a European Singapore.’”
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