Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 7 – One of the
consequences of the propaganda campaign against Kyiv that has accompanied
Vladimir Putin’s Anschluss of Crimea and moves elsewhere in Ukraine is that it
has displaced the anti-Caucasus theme in the Russian media that had so animated
Russians until very recently, according to Ruslan Kurbanov.
On the one hand, this probably comes
as no surprise given that the media only have so much time and space to devote
to anything and thus a focus on one issue makes it difficult to cover
others. On the other, it highlights the
way in which the Russian media exacerbate or even create issues and then drop
them when the Kremlin directs its attention to something new.
But on a deeper level, Kurbanov, a
senior scholar at the Moscow Institute of Oriental Studies, says, it reflects
the displacement as well of a specifically ethnic Russian national agenda, one
prepared to let the North Caucasus go, by a more imperialistic Kremlin agenda
that wants to hold on to everything it has and take more (ansar.ru/person/2014/04/03/49225).
Some
people in the Caucasus are delighted at “the cessation of the information
bombardment in the Caucasus direction” since the Ukrainian crisis began, he
says, but they should be concerned because the media shift appears to reflect
not just the news cycle but something more fundamental and not necessarily in
the interests of the region.
It
is likely, he says, that this shift will be obscured in the near term when “the
hysteria around Ukraine dies down” and Caucasians again become the targets of
the media, but it needs to be clearly understood just what is going on.
Kurbanov
cites a recent “Vedomosti” article by Ramazan Alpaut who says that many in the Russian
elite have been pleased to play up the image of the Caucasians as enemies and
threats because this allows the regime to avoid having to explain “why there is
up to now such a high level of corruption, unemployment, infant and child
mortality, drug abuse, and alcoholism.”
For
all these things, the Russian media has been prepared to blame the Caucasians,
Alpaut says. But the demonization of the people of the North Caucasus
highlights the absence in Russia of “a single political nation” and has led at
least some in the elite to think that Russia might be better off without that
region and all its troubles.
Despite
presidential plenipotentiary Aleksandr Khloponin’s efforts to explain why the
North Caucasus is “so important for Russia,” Kurban continues, among many in Moscow
“close to the powers that be,” the view of the North Caucasus and its role has
been very different and far more negative.
Various people
from Gleb Pavlovsky to Sergey Kurginyan to Stanislav Belkovsky to Vladimir
Zhirnovsky and even to some in the country’s security services have talked
about the value of splitting off the North Caucasus from Russia and treating
the republics there like South Osetia and Abkhazia, as “mini-satellites” but
beyond the borders of the Russian Federation.
Some have even associated people
around Dmitry Medvedev with this idea, Kurbanov says, and that is one of the reasons
that Kremlin ideologist Aleksandr Dugin has criticized the former president and
current prime minister so harshly, apparently fearful of what cutting off the
North Caucasus could lead to.
Until very recently, however, it
certainly appeared that “the will to integrate the Caucasus had died among a
significant part of the Russian elite. And it had died just as other “super-national”
ideologies had because Russians were tired of what they saw as the burden they
continued to carry and even wanted their own ethnically Russian state.
And such a shift became possible,
Kurbanov continues, because until the Ukrainian crisis, “for Russians the
former challenges from the US, NATO and the West had passed” and no longer
defined their lives. But with the Maidan and then the Russian intervention in
Crimea, that past returned in the minds of many, and that points to “a new
agenda for the Caucasus.”
Maintaining and extending the
borders of the Russian Federation against these threats is now the order of the
day, and that means, Kurbanov argues, that constant attacks on people from the
Caucasus are counterproductive. But not
talking about the Caucasus does nothing to solve the problems of that region or
its integration into the Russian Federation.
Not only is there likely to be a new
explosion of activism by ethnic Russians in the North Caucasus who will be
encouraged to make demands for Moscow’s intervention after the fashion of
Russian moves in Crimea, but there will be “a new awakening” of the region “under
ethnic banners” both as a result of that and because of underlying and still
unaddressed causes.
Very soon, Kurbanov suggests, “all
these problems will rise before Moscow and the Caucasus several times more
sharply than they are today.” If those concerned about the Caucasus and the
Russian Federation don’t use this time out from anti-Caucasus propaganda
productively, he concludes, they may not get another chance.
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