Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 28 – Just as it
did in Ukraine, Moscow is preparing again to play the citizenship card in
Estonia and Latvia, muddying the waters as to who is “a Russian” and who is
thus part of Vladimir Putin’s “Russian world” and worthy of Moscow’s defense
whether any of them want that “defense” or not.
In the case of Ukraine, the Russian
government at various points over the last six months has included in what
Putin calls “the Russian world” “citizens of the Russian Federation,” “ethnic
Russians regardless of citizenship,” “Russian speakers,” and those who identify
with Russia regardless of their ethnicity, language, or citizenship.
Now as it steps up the pressure
against the Baltic countries, Moscow is again using a highly elastic definition
of who is part of the Russian world and who is not, something that must be
understood and acknowledged if the Baltic countries and their supporters are
going to be in a position to turn back Moscow’s efforts to subvert, destabilize
and otherwise move against them.
An article by Nadezhda Yermolayeva
in “Rossiiskaya gazeta” last week with the headline “Residents of Latvia are
taking Russian citizenship in great numbers” provides both an indication of the
direction the Russian government is moving and also the flexible way it is
defining who is part of Putin’s “Russian world” (rg.ru/2014/09/24/grajdanstvo-site-anons.html).
But even more valuable, although
this was certainly not Yermolayeva’s intent, the article also provides
important guidance on what the Baltic governments and their supporters in
Europe may now face and should do lest the Kremlin leader succeed in so
muddying the waters that many do not respond to his aggression until what may
be too late.
According to Yermolayeva, “every 50th
resident of Latvia is a citizen of Russia,” and their number is “growing from
year to year.” And she says that
specialists say that citizens of Latvia as well as non-citizens are now taking
Russian citizenship, something that one of her contacts said “the Latvian authorities
ought to be thinking about.”
Some are doing so for purely economic
reasons: the retirement age in Latvia rising and by changing citizenship some
people can get pensions sooner. But more is involved than that, she suggests,
noting that the number of people taking Russian citizenship now is especially
large in Latgale, “the easternmost and poorest region” of the country.
According to the statistics Yermolayeva
gives, 13 percent of the population of Latvia are not citizens of that country.
That amounts to 288,000 people. In most cases, these are people who were moved
into Latvia while it was occupied by the Soviet Union and thus could not
qualify for citizenship under international law.
Many of these people are loyal to Latvia
but resent the idea that they should have to apply for citizenship rather than
gain it automatically, Yermolayeva says. But intriguingly she adds that such
people are in some ways “the most privileged” group in the region because they
have the right to travel freely in Europe and without a visa to Russia.
“In
neighboring Estonia,” the Moscow journalist continues, “the number of ‘non-citizens’
is lower than in Latvia” – only seven percent of the population is in that
category. But at the same time, the number of Russian citizens is higher” –
seven percent according to the Baltic Institute for Social Science.
The reason for this difference in the balance
of persons without citizenship and those with Russian citizenship, the Moscow
journalist continues, is a product of different decisions of the two countries
in the 1990s. But it has important consequences: in Estonia, there are no “powerful
and independent Russian-language political parties,” but in Latvia, there are.
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