Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 20 – No one should be
surprised that “Vladimir Putin is finding a common language with that segment
of European politicians who are playing on the sharpening of national feelings”
both to strengthen their own domestic position and to promote myths about their
nation’s pasts.
But Yaroslav Shimov argues in “Novaya
gazeta” there are important limits to cooperation between Moscow and the
European right because with rare exceptions “almost none of the new friends of
the Kremlin is an opponent of parliamentary democracy and does not sympathie
with the Russian political model” (novayagazeta.ru/comments/63608.html).
Thus, Nigel Farage, the leader of
the British populist party UKIP, while expressing his admiration for Putin’s
political skills, directly stated: “I do not trust him and would not want to
live in his country.”
That is a difference that is
sometimes overlooked, Shimov says, in coverage of the growing popularity of
national populist groups in Europe and their efforts to cooperate with Moscow
and in Moscow’s use of the term “fascism” to demonize the leaders of Ukraine
who are resisting Russia’s demands.
But for almost everyone on both
sides, this is a “tactical” alliance in this case “against European integration
and the liberal mainstream,” the commentator says, a reflection of the
longstanding political principle that “the enemy of my enemy is my friend”
rather than something more.
“Present-day European national
conservatism does not have such a destructive potential as that ideology which
the Kremlin is currently propagandizing as ‘conservatism,’” Shimov says.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban may talk about the rights of Hungarians
abroad but there is no indication that he is about to annex Transcarpathia.
The same is true, he continues, for
the Italian Northern League which is delighted with the idea of a Crimean-style
referendum in Italy which could demonstrate its strength, but it “does not
consider [what Moscow has done in Crimea] a model for emulation” And Geert Wilders
of the Dutch Freedom Party opposes EU help for Ukraine “not because he likes
Russia’s actions but because he considers such assistance” an unnecessary
burden for European taxpayers.
“In this sense,” Shimov suggests, “Europe
is genuinely conservative, unlike the lip-service ‘conservatism’ of Russia
which now is acting in the role of a geopolitical revolutionary.” Indeed, Europe’s reluctance to confront
Moscow over Ukraine reflects that attitude as much as anything.
To oppose Moscow by offering Kyiv “immediate
military assistance and begin talks about Ukrainian membership in NATO is,”
from this perspective, “to accept the Kremlin’s rules of the game which by
undermining a weak Ukraine is seeking to carry Europe into a period of a total
redrawing of borders.”
“In a political sense,” Shimov
concludes, “the European 20th century is continuing. However, the last
century had not only an apocalyptic first half but well-off and constructive
second part. The next few years and
perhaps even months will show which of these historical orientations is closer
to Europe and which to Russia.”
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