Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 25 – The
unwillingness of Russians to make a sharp break with the Soviet past and accept
that Russia today is “a new independent state” and the efforts of Vladimir
Putin and his regime to present Russia as a country with a single unbroken
history has left Russia without a present or a future but only a past,
according to Vadim Shtepa.
Unlike in Germany in 1945 or Russia
itself in 1917, the Russian regionalist argues, there is no willingness among
most Russians to accept the idea that they now live in “another Russia,” one
radically dissimilar from its predecessor and indeed “a new independent state”
like the other former Soviet republics (spektr.delfi.lv/novosti/drugaya-rossiya.d?id=45261408).
That
helps to explain why Russia remains mired in its past and also why it has gone
to war in Ukraine, but it also suggests that if Russians do not accept that
they live in a truly new country and a federation „Russia may soon not exist at
all, with the ‘third Rome’ repeated the fate of the ‘first,’” however eternal
both Russians and Romans thought their empires to be.
When
the USSR collapsed in December 1991, „another country” appeared on teh map of
the world. People in the West continued to call it „Russia” just as they had
called the Soviet Union, but „it was understood there that this was already ‘another
Russia’ which both in its borders and ideology was different from the USSR.”
Inside
the country, Shtepa continues, „this difference was still more obvious.” But they should have
been recognized, celebrated and deepened because „this historic shift should
have been no less deep than that in Germany from the Third Reich to the Federal
Republic,” even if people there and elsewhere called both „Germany.”
Unfortunately, in Russia, „this transition was carried
out not as a historical and worldview revolution but as a conformist consensus.
The former party leaders, having thrown off their old ideology, quickly found a
place for themselves in the new state system. There was no lustration,” because
Boris Yeltsin did not want to „rock the boat.”
„As a result,” Shtepa says, „the bureaucratic
nomenklatura easily preserved itself, only having to exchange the red party
cards of the CPSU for the blue plastic cards of ‘United Russia.’” But their worldview and administrative
approaches did not change. And now they are ready to reclaim publicly what they
never gave up in practice.
It is surprising but also symbolic that „there were no
attempts in the 1990s in ‘new Russia’ to create any fundamentally new state
symbols.” Instead, the rulers simply
reached back and restored many from the imperial era, and they adopted the same
approach when they came to draft the Federation Treaty in 1992, employing
tsarist and Soviet methods rather than new ones.
(This is „a sad irony of history,” Shtepa says, because
only a year or so before the end of the Soviet Union, Yeltsin and his team
regularly counter-posed „’sovereign Russia’” to „the Kremlin ‘center,’”
something they stopped doing as of December 1991.)
„The
‘new Russia’” of 1991 „borrowed practically all of its symbols from the
pre-revolutionary empire,” and that „symbolic failure” was accompanied by
another failure: „the return of endless Caucasian colonial wars” that the
tsarist regime had fought and that the „new” Russia has had to fight again.
But
that „symbolic” failure was paralleled by an even greater one, Moscow’s efforts
to present Russian history as a single unbroken stream with now
fundamental breaks, a failure that both can be explained and reinforces „a
total distrust in the present” and opposition to anything that somehow separates
it from some „’glorious past.’”
The
absurdity and dangers of all this for Russia become obvious if one imagines how anyone
would react if „present-day Italians suddenly began to conceive themselves as the
literal descendants of the Roman Empire” or if Germans „suddenly were to
recognize the fuehrer as ‘an effective manager’ despite certain excesses.”
Post-Soviet
Russia’s unwillingness and inability to escape from such historical nonsense
was very much on public view at the time of the opening of the Sochi Olympics.
Instead of doing what all other hosts of such competitions have done and
present an image of the country now, the Russian organizers offered the image
of a country including Kitezh, a nobility ball, and the construction of
communism all mixed together.
And „if one reads sites like ‘Russian Idea’ where
numerous influential experts are published, one frequently has the impression
that the authors are living in the 19th century. They still think in the
categories of opposing other empires, cite Dostoyevsky and Danilevsky, and talk
about „’the limitrophe’” in the Baltics.
Without exception, Shtepa writes, such authors consider
themselves conservatives, but the problem is this: they don’t know what to
conserve because they are unwilling to make choices. And their unwillingness to
do so has already cost Russia its present and may eventually cost it its future
as well.
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