Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 14 -- By his
instrumental use of nationalist slogans in the current “chauvinistic storm”
about Ukraine, Vladimir Putin has blocked the growth of a genuinely
contemporary Russian nationalism and reduced it instead to a state-controlled
ideology he will dispense with whenever he wants, according to Fedor
Krasheninnikov.
The Ekaterinburg
commentator says that he had been encouraged by the convergence of Russian
nationalism with liberalism in 2011-2013 and the formation of a contemporary
Russian nationalism that was increasingly independent and critical of the
regime in Moscow (kashin.guru/2014/06/13/nacionalizm/).
“For the first time in the entire
history of Russia, liberals and ‘intellectual nationalists’ as it were turned
out to be on the same side of the barricades and agreed that the main enemy is
the current authoritarian regime and the future of Russia is to be a democratic
European country,” Krasheninnikov says.
But “the chauvinist storm” which has
swept across Russia as a result of government propaganda about Ukraine
represents “the collapse of a non-marginal ‘contemporary European Russian
nationalism’ as a self-standing political ideology independent from the
authorities of the Russian Federation.”
Many Russian nationalists, he
continues, have failed to see this. Instead, they believe that Putin’s actions
in Ukraine are a victory for Russian nationalism and that the Kremlin leader is
now “their man.” But this is a fundamental misunderstanding, one that threatens
to reduce Russian nationalism as in the past to little more than a plaything of
the authorities.
That should be obvious to everyone,
he says, if one considers the fact that those pushing nationalist slogans today
are the very people and outlets who opposed Russian nationalism a decade or
more ago. These people haven’t become Russian nationalists; they are simply
government propagandists.
What has happened instead is that “at
a certain moment. for utilitarian mobilizational needs and for boosting Putn’s
ratings, the authorities made use of nationalistic rhetoric” – but they did so
only after long reflection and in a highly tendentious and selective way. What
helped them to fight Ukrainians and boost Putin, they took; everything else,
they ignored.
The authorities clearly did not
accept any argument “about the anti-Russian essence of the current Russian
Federation,” but they instead promoted the notion, useful to themselves but not
part of all Russian nationalist thought that the Ukrainians are not a nation
and thus must be absorbed into the Russian Federation.
In the now-official version, Krasheninnikov
says, “the main enemies of Russia and the Russians are Ukraine and the
Ukrainians and the ever-present Americans.” Moreover, in this telling, “everything
is fine in the Russian Federation and it has no other problems besides war with
Ukraine.”
But Russian nationalists need to ask
themselves: “has Crimea which has been annexed to the Russian Federation become
more Russian national than any other average Russian oblast of the Russian
Federation?” The answer, the commentator says, is that it has become rather “’a
Russian Mordvinia’” where Putin and his party will always get “98 percent” of
the vote.
“Behind the façade of ‘the Russian
spring’ is nothing except Putin’s Russian Federation,” he says. And anyone who
reflects for a minute will recognize that “absolutely nothing has been changed
in the structure of the Russian state.” Instead, just as in the past, an order
has been given to suppress Ukraine, and those who follow orders are trying to
do it.
When a different order comes down
from the Kremlin, its supporters will cast aside Russian nationalism and adopt
whatever the regime wants.
Tragically, he continues, all too
many Russian nationalists have failed to understand this. Instead, they have been
misled by the regime’s slogans. But they should reflect on this: how has it
happened that none of them have become leaders of “the Russian spring” while
that action has been dominated by people who in the past opposed Russian
nationalism?
Moreover, the future for Russian nationalists is
anything but bright. If the veterans of
the fighting in Donetsk and Luhansk return to Russia alive, they and not the
theoreticians of a modernized Russian nationalism will be in demand. And their
nationalism reflects whatever the powers that be says it should and nothing
more.
“Each nation can and must have its
own nationalism even if this doesn’t please liberals and nationalists of other nationalities,
Krasheninnikov continues. But he says that from his personal point of view,
what has occurred over the last several months is both wrong and discouraging.
“Instead of a contemporary, European
and civilized Russian nationalism with which one can argue, struggle, and
constructively co-exist,” there has appeared once again in Russia an “aggressive
and angry” nationalism of the Prokhanovs and Zhirinovskys “without prospects
and completely controlled by the state.”
All Putin had to do was to pronounce
the word “’Russian,’” and people fell all over themselves to believe that he
had taken a nationalist turn. But all he has to do is say something else, and
the propaganda machine will ensure that people will take an entirely and quite
possibly totally opposed one.
A few Russian nationalists have not
been deceived, he says. Instead, “even in the most insane days of ‘the Russian
spring,’ they retained their good sense and did not fall into chauvinist
hysteria, did not curse Ukrainians, and were not afraid to speak out in support
of Ukraine, remembering that Ukrainians are our
brothers” -- unlike the Chechens on whom Putin relies.
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