Paul Goble
Staunton, April 6 – Aleksandr Dugin,
who appears to be increasingly influential in Kremlin circles, says that Moscow
views Baku’s UN vote on Ukraine a “an unfriendly act,” that “the territorial
integrity of Azerbaijan is in Moscow’s hands,” and that “an Azerbaijan hostile
to Russia will instantly cease its existence.”
Dugin, who describes himself as a
Eurasianist but who has been classified as a fascist by many Western experts,
added that Moscow is carefully watching who supports it on Crimea and who does
not and that “we shall see who are our friends and who are our enemies” and act
accordingly (minval.az/author/521).
Like Vladimir Zhirinovsky with whom
he is sometimes paired because his statements are often outrageous but reflect,
if one strips them of their adjectives and adverbs, the direction the Kremlin
under Vladimir Putin is going, Dugin makes clear that no country on the
post-Soviet space or perhaps even beyond is safe.
He says that “the only guarantee of
the territorial integrity of all the post-Soviet states is Russia itself. If
Russia does not want to be a guarantor of the territorial integrity of these
states, then their territorial integrity will be violated ... In a
confrontation with Moscow, not one post-Soviet state will exist in its current
borders.”
“For the time being,” Dugin adds, “Russia
supports the juridical demands of Azerbaijan on Karabakh.” But if Baku opposes
Moscow, that could change, and the situation could end in ways Azerbaijan would
not like.
Dugin, 52 and the son of a GRU
lieutenant general, has been a feature of the extreme right of the Russian
political spectrum since 1980. In fact, he first attracted attention as a
member of the semi-fascist Black Order of the SS in 1980. Then, in the late
1980s, he became a member of the far right anti-Semitic Pamyat group.
From 1993 to 1998, he was an
ideologist for the National Bolshevik Party of Eduard Limonov, ten served as an
advisor to Duma head Gennady Seleznev, and as president of the Center for the
Expert-Consulting Council for Problems of National Security in the office of
the chairman of the State duma.
In 2001, he re-invented himself as
head of the Eurasian movement, and since 2008, he has been an unofficial
advisor and ideologist of Putin’s United Russia Party, the result of his
evolution from his earlier anti-Soviet and anti-communist views to his current
brand of Russian nationalism and imperialism.
Azerbaijani commentator Zafar
Guliyev provides a checklist of some of Dugin’s more outrageous positions,
views that Guliyev accurately describes as being informed by “totalitarianism
of a fascist kind” and that reflect
Dugin’s commitment to a highly authoritarian political system in Russia and
support for Russian imperialism abroad.
Among these are:
·
“We
have come to proclaim the era of the Great Cleansing. Our goals is to establish
a new army, the army of Eurasia.”
·
“Our
goal is a Eurasian Empire.”
·
“Our ethnics are based on the
proposition that death is better than shape. If you cannot be strong, it is
better that you not exist at all.”
·
“The country needs new people ...
Joyful and pitiless.”
·
“It is completely incorrect to call
fascism an ‘extreme right’ ideology. This phenomenon is more accurately characterized
by the paradoxical formulation, ‘Conservative Revolution,’” a phrase Putin’s
propagandists have often used.
·
“Russia has many shortcomings and problems, corruption is very strong,
and there is a moral collapse, but in comparison with Europe, we are living in
a golden age.”
·
“An important aspect of the Eurasian worldview is an absolute denial of
Western civilization. In the opinion of the Eurasians, the West with its
ideology of liberalism is an absolute evil.”
·
“The Russian Ivan as an individual is nothing, but the most Russian
thing in him is everything. The idea is everything, the stage is everything,
but the individual is nothing.”
·
“In the society which Russia needs there must not be representative
democracy, a market economy ... or the idiotic, anti-natural, and perverted
ideology of human rights.” They must be gotten rid of.
Having
provided these quotations from Dugin’s writings, Guliyev notes that these “paranoid
neo-fascist plans” are not those of some marginal figure but rather of an
individual who has “already found a real response in the Kremlin, in Russia
itself, and even among some beyond its borders.”
To some, he says, such plans must
seem “completely absurd;” but then he asks, is it not that case that “out of
such absurdities arose the world wars [of the past]?” And Guliyev suggests that
everyone should remember that initially, many in th 1930s dismissed fascism as
a marginal phenomenon. “And then what happened?”
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