Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 19 – Throughout history,
Russians have been often been enthusiastic about government programs proclaiming
“the ingathering of Russian lands,” only to discover that such efforts
inevitably involve increasing repression against themselves and are in fact “a
holy war” by the government against them in the name of strengthening itsel, Oleg
Noskov says.
In an essay posted online yesterday,
the Russian commentator describes the actions of the Muscovite tsars against
Novgorod and other independent principalities in order to show the way in which
the Russian state has always presented these events and the way in which the
Russian people have accepted that version (rufabula.com/articles/2014/04/18/holy-war-with-his-people).
And his depiction of how the rulers
defined the process of the ingathering of the Russian lands half a millennium ago,
of what they were really about, and of how the Russian people still perceive
them goes a long way to explain Moscow’s current campaign, its ultimately
anti-Russian basis, and the willingness of Russians to accept the Kremlin’s
version of events.
Supporters of Russian autocracy have
justified any action, no matter how many victims foreign or domestic it might
entail, Noskov says, as something required to defend the state from “numerous
foreign enemies” and as the recovery of what was rightfully Russia’s rather
than its expansion into areas that were not.
Such arguments, he continues, not
only inform the views of ordinary Russians because they represent the core of
the teaching of Russian history textbooks but also have continued to operate by
inertia if nothing else as the basis of the modus operandi of the Russian state
in its multifarious forms.
At the end of the 15th
century, he argues, Muscovy moved against Novgorod not because the latter was
interested in launching a military campaign against it but rather on the basis
of an argument that the Novgorodians were invoved in “’betrayal’” of Russia
because they supposedly were trying to place themselves under the protection of
“alien Catholic rule.”
Thus, according to the official
Russian accounts, Muscovy was doing no more than defending itself by recovering
that which was in fact its own from the expansion of foreign influence, an
argument, Noskov implies, which has lost none of its power in the intervening
centuries and informs the Kremlin’s approach to Ukraine now.
But behind such words, he says, what
the Muscovite rulers were about was the extension of their own power and
property, not the welfare of the Russian people, as some like to claim. The Russian state was not created “in the
interests of the Russian people but exclusively in those of the AUTOCRATS
THEMSELVES AND THOSE CLOSE TO THEM.”
Noskov suggests that this has been
the pattern of many states going back to ancient times – he provides several
examples – but he says that the autocratic behavior of the Russian state is
different in two important respects: Many are inclined to blame the Mongol yoke
for this rather than to see it as self-generated.
And, in contrast to most other
countries, the Russian state has continued to impose this vision on the
population rather than to allow any dissent from it, dissent that could allow
the Russian people to see that the power of the Russian state is in the first instance
directed against them.
Thus, Noskov says, the actions of
the Russian rulers are not so difficult to understand,, but what is more
difficult and troubling is “the interpretation of such facts,” the continuing
willingness of the Russian people to accept the official version of the past
and thus to allow the past to be repeated again and again.
Part of the reason, of course, is that “power-central
patriots” have inevitably argued that “’truth’ must always be on the side” of
the state and thus its version of events must be accepted even if superficial examination of the facts suggests
that the story it is putting out is both self-interested and false.
Thus, for example, official history has
always suggested that Moscow is fulfilling “’the Orthodox mission,’” but the
central authorities have not been reluctant to ally themselves with
non-Christians from Aleksandr Nevsky’s time forward in order to promote their
own personal power and property.
Nor did those who sought to be “absolute
despots” restrain themselves by allowing their subjects “the right to economic
independence.” Instead, these despots had to “deprive” the latter of their
property or make it conditional on the will of the autocrat who could take it
away at any time.
Consequently, behind the slogan of “the
ingathering of Russian lands” from the very beginning has been the interest of
the autocratic state in strengthening itself against the Russian people in
whose name Moscow has continued to proclaim it is acting.
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