Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 25 – Vladimir Putin’s
promotion of the idea that Moscow must preserve “the Russian world” has already
led to the transformation of his country into something very different than it
was before, but the shakiness of its three main foundations is such that it is
unlikely to survive for very long, according to Rashit Akhmetov.
In a lead article in “Zvezda
Povolzhya” this week, Akhmetov says that Putin’s moves mean that the citizens
of the Russian Federation “now live in a new country,” one which has driven the
Yeltsin period underground, become “a besieged fortress,” and is seeking out “traitors
to the nation” (no. 15 (695), April 24-30, 2014, p. 1)
But “what does this term include and
where are the borders of this beautiful new ‘Russian world’?” Akhmetov says there are three, none of which
is without serious problems and all of which both separately and in conjunction
with each other mean that “the Russian world” is an ideological construct
without the basis in the real world that will allow it to survive for long.
The first basis for defining Putin’s
world, of course, is “the genetically Russian,” but that is anything but unproblematic,
the Kazan editor says. As ethno-genetic
studies have shown, “95 percent” of those called ethnic Russians now are “a conglomerate
of Finno-Ugric tribes” and remain internally divided even in ethno-national
terms.
“The Pomors, the Don Cossacks, the
Siberians and the people of the Urals are significantly different from each
other,” he points out, suggesting that in fact, they are “literally parallel
worlds.”
What Putin has done in suggesting
that Russians and his “Russian world” are unified on this basis is nothing more
than “a television cartoon” that seeks to put all this diversity onto a
bureaucratically-established “Procrustean bed.”
That in turn could lead to a “new geopolitical catastrophe.” At the very
least, it shows that “it is impossible to build ‘the Russian world’ on
genetics.”
The second criteria that Putin has
employed in advancing his idea is that the Russian world is based on the
Russian language, that “the zones of the dominance of the Russian language are
to be understood as the zone of ‘the Russian world.’” But that understanding, with its roots in
tsarist and Soviet times, is no firmer a foundation, Akhmetov says.
“If the Russian language is accepted
as the definition of ‘the Russian world,’” he continues, “then one can predict
the next conflict in Northern Kazakhstan where three million ethnic Russians
live.”
But by itself, Akhmetov argues, language
is “a weak ‘patriotic’ mobilizing tool,” one on the basis of which no state can
successfully maintain itself for very long.
Language does nothing to overcome ideological and political divisions
among those who speak it, and for at least some of these partisans, their views
on other questions are more significant to them than language is.
And third, Akhmetov says, “it is
possible to identify ‘the Russian world’ with the Russian Orthodox Church.” But that is a very “narrow” world, given that
at least half of the population of the Russian Federation today is either
non-Orthodox by faith or atheist. Any
attempt to make Orthodoxy the state ideology will inevitably provoke a reaction
among them.
Moreover, the Church itself, however
much it denies this, is hardly unified, however servile to the Kremlin its top
leaders may be. And it is not
unimportant that the Moscow Patriarchate derives half of its income from
Ukraine where there has been a religious rebirth and not just the bureaucratic
extension of the hierarchy.
For all these reasons, Akhmetov
concludes, Putin’s “Russian world” is really “a phantom ... on the basis of
which it is impossible to build a state.” Nationalism of course is a product of
the romantic era, he continues, but for it to take off, there must be “a
passionate impulse.” That doesn’t exist
in Russia today.
Where that impulse doesn’t exist, he
continues, “the narcotic of imperialism” only hides the forces leading to decay
and disintegration. That may distract
some for a time, Akhmetov suggests, but even if the Kremlin makes use of
increasing doses of this drug, that will not be enough to maintain the state or
anything like “the Russian world” for the long term.
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