Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 16 – The Russian
authorities have unleashed and are conducting a war in Ukraine, “a new type of
war without declaration or a front line” and one that is simultaneously “destroying
all official Soviet and post-Soviet myths and clarifying the real nature of the
political regime in Russia,” according to Igor Chubais.
Chubais, a Moscow professor and
commentator and the elder brother of UES head Anatoly Chubais, says in a blog
post yesterday that as a result of what Putin is doing in Ukraine, “everyone
must understand that a reborn and updated Stalinist regime is operating in
Russia” (aboutru.com/2014/06/i7333/).
Many
people in both Russia and the West do want to believe that and continue to
place their faith in three key myths that the events in Ukraine show are no
longer true. First, the Russian invasion
has destroyed the long cultivated myth about the Great Fatherland War which
includes the notions that war is “impermissible” and those who launch one are
guilty of “crimes against human nature.”
Second,
the Russian war in Ukraine has “completely destroyed the myth about ‘the
fraternal Ukrainian people.’” Russia for a long time into the future “will not
have any brothers or any friends.” It may be that Russians will be able at some
point to be friends with Germans or Chinese, but they will never again do so
with Ukrainians.
And
third, Putin’s Ukrainian actions have destroyed “the myth about present-day
Russia as an Orthodox state.” According to Chubais, “Orthodox do not shoot at
Orthodox!” But the Russian Orthodox
Church has not tried to distance itself from the fighting or call for its end.
Instead, “Orthodoxy has been transformed into an instrument of official policy.”
The
Russian media have helped in this process, he continues. They have “completely ceased to fulfill the function
of informing citizens” and instead become “a direct and open megaphone of the
terrorist organizations ‘the Donetsk Peoples Republic’ and ‘the Luhansk Peoples
Republic.’”
Indeed,
Chubais argues, “there are no more mass media outlets in Russia; [[instead,]
there have been restored the means of mass agitation and propaganda which existed
in the USSR.” And the situation is worse
because Western broadcasts to Russia are to a large extent no longer heard.
These acts of
destruction, he continues, “mean the destruction of all the rest of the
official myths constructed on the basis of them and the draining of any meaning
from any declaration by the authorities.”
Nothing, not the constitution, not a legal state, not the ban on
censorship any longer has any meaning.
And there
has been another revenant from the Stalinist past, he continues, the appearance
of “’useful idiots’” in the West like Marie Le Pen in France or the German parliamentarian
who talked about “fascists in the Maidan.”
Given all
this, both Russians and people in the West should recognize this new reality
and take appropriate measures, and the Ukrainians should not pay a single penny
of their gas “debt” to Russia. “Paying for one’s own destruction is,” Chubais
concludes, “something more than absurd.”
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