Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 1 – A bill being
pushed in the Russian Duma to allow Russia to “absorb and form new subjects,” one
that promotes the idea that local referenda can trump international agreements,
could backfire on the country and even lead to its destruction, according to a
Moscow commentator.
Writing on the Kasparov.ru site
yesterday, Irek Murtazin says that it is clear those behind the measure want to
create a legal fiction that would allow them to make an end run around international
law and to absorb parts of neighboring states without the agreement of the
governments of those states (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5310CD26DBD2A).
But those backing the measure forget
that two can play that game. What will happen, Murtazin says, “if tomorrow a
similar law is adopted by China, Japan, or Mongolia, by Ukraine or Belarus? And
then across all of Russia, ‘a part of another state’ begins to conduct
referenda about unification?”
“If
Tyva, for example, wants to combine with Mongolia? A couple of districts of
Orenburg with Kazakhstan? Taganrog and Novorossiisk to join to Ukraine? And
Smolensk and Pskov with Belarus?” If any
of those things happen, what will the Russian backers of this new measure
say? That is “contradicts international
law” given what they have done.
Clearly
this measure is being pushed because of a desire in Moscow to spark a civil war
in Ukraine over Crimea. But if Ukraine
might be the first victim, “Russia would suffer most of all,” Murtazin says.
Doesn’t anyone in the regime understand that? Or do they assume that the world
will allow Russia to act in ways it would not allow anyone else?
But even if those things don’t
happen, even if the West continues to defer to Moscow and permit it to do what
it would not allow anyone else, Russia will still suffer from this law and its
application. It will find it harder to export its oil and gas, and it may very
well face serious refugee flows.
Russians should be thinking about
all these risks before adopting such a dangerous piece of legislation, Murtazin
says. One can only add that so should
the leaders of the West who need to recognize not only how dangerous this law
would be in the short term but how it would reinforce Moscow’s view of
international acceptance of Russian exceptionalism.
Boris
Vishnevsky, a Yabloko deputy in St. Petersburg’s legislative assembly, puts the
challenge to the West Putin has laid down in even more stark terms. He says that what is happening in Crimea
recalls Hitler’s move into the Sudetenland, where initially German forces were
welcomed with flowers (echo.msk.ru/blog/boris_vis/1269148-echo/).
That
leaves open, of course, another and potentially more important question, he
suggests. Will there be a new Munich?
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