Paul
Goble
Staunton,
December 28 – Mikhail Gorbachev who presided over the disintegration of the
Soviet Union, says that “the main contribution” of Vladimir Putin is that he
“saved Russia from the disintegration” which was beginning since “a very great
number of regions essentially were no longer recognizing [the Russian]
Constitution.”
Gorbachev made that declaration at
the launch last week of his new book “After the Kremlin” (lenta.ru/news/2014/12/26/gorbachev/), adding that
he had known and been impressed by Putin before the latter became president and
that he Gorbachev had made many mistakes because he had operated on the
assumption that he had everything under control.
Putin’s reaction to this latest
voice of support for the claims of his backers that he stopped the
disintegration of Russia is unknown, but given that it comes from Gorbachev and
given what the latter’s words say about the nature of the Russian state as
such, it is far from clear that the current Russian president would be entirely
pleased by the words of the first and only Soviet one.
On the one hand, even if he were to
welcome Gorbachev’s suggestion that he has “saved Russia from disintegration,”
Putin could hardly be pleased by the former Soviet leader’s suggestion that “a
very great number of regions” were essentially outside of the Russian
constitutional orbit, a suggestion that implies the threat was far great than
Putin has said.
And on the other, coming from
Gorbachev who lost control of the Soviet bloc, the occupied Baltic countries,
and 11 non-Russian republics as well as the Russian Federation itself, such
praise looks dangerously like setting the bar rather low, given Putin’s
aspirations not just to end the disintegration of the country but to restore
its imperial greatness and extent.
But if one considers Gorbachev’s
remarks from a broader perspective than Putin’s, they point to something many
in Russia and elsewhere have not wanted to face: Russia’s disintegration did
not end in 1991, and the forces threatening its further disintegration have not
disappeared, despite Putin’s actions and his ban on any public suggestion that
they have.
Instead, they remain strong and may
even be growing not only in the North Caucasus where many have identified them
to be but also in the Middle Volga and in predominantly Russian regions from
St. Petersburg to Siberia, and preventing Russia’s disintegration thus remains
the primary task of any Russian leader.
That in turn suggests something that
neither Gorbachev nor Putin nor the supporters of either want to acknowledge:
Russia is still an empire and not yet a country, however much many would like
to think otherwise – and as such, it is subject to the forces both on the
periphery and at the center that have torn all empires in the history of the
world apart.
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