Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 21 – The admission
by a Moscow newspaper of what the whole world knows even if its leaders
sometimes won’t say -- that Moscow has deployed units of its own army in
Ukraine – has attracted attention around the world, but one part of that
acknowledgement has not, although ultimately this may be the most important
part of it.
And that is this: Moscow is not
using just any of its own troops. It is using non-Russians in its war against
Ukraine, and at least some of their fellow non-Russians within the current
borders of the Russian Federation are asking a question that Vladimir Putin
certainly doesn’t want them to: when, they inquire, did the Ukrainians attack
our nations and republics?
Four of the seven soldiers referred
to by Ilya Barabanova in “Kommersant” on Thursday are from non-Russian parts of
the country, not surprising given the demographic decline of the ethnic
Russians relative to non-Russian nations there and economic problems that drive
some non-Russians to see the military as a way out much as less-well-off groups
do in other countries (kommersant.ru/doc/2671088).
In reporting this pattern but in not
giving the full names so that the nationalities of those involved could be
determined, the “Kommersant” journalist says by way of a postscript that “the
author knows the full names of all the heroes of the text but the editors do
not consider it correct to publish them yet.”
But Balabanov provides one telling
detail: an exchange among soldiers of the Russian military. One, who notes that
there are Buryats in their ranks, says that they are “Donbas Indians,” a
dismissive comment about a proud Mongol nation in the Transbaikal. And then the journalist adds “All smile
[because] all understand everything.”
In commenting on this story,
however, one Buryat activist makes it clear that not everyone understands
everything or at last everything in the way that Vladimir Putin would like them
to. Sayana Mongush notes that “Ukraine
has not attacked Buryata, Tuva or Yakutia” and wonders why men from there
should be sent to fight there (facebook.com/sayana.mongush).
Once again, the empire is using its
non-Russian subjects to do its fighting, and once again, while some are doing
so willingly, others are questioning this practice. And such questions in and
of themselves highlight the divisions within Russian society and undermine the
supposed monolithic unity of that country.
At the very least, they are likely
to give some in Moscow pause about a policy that demographics and economics
have left the Russian regime if it wants to continue its aggression with no
choice but to adopt.
In the coming days and weeks as
Putin’s aggression continues, it will thus be important to watch not only the
extent to which the Russian Army in Ukraine is not exclusively Russian but also
the way in which non-Russians are reacting to their use, especially as the
Kremlin pushes an ever more Russian nationalist line and reduces its support
for non-Russian areas.
At the same time, and in yet another
indication that neither Russians nor non-Russians are as eager to fight in
Ukraine as some have suggested, there are no increasingly frequent reports that
Moscow will use at least some of the prisoners it plans to amnesty as soldiers
in Ukraine (zloy-odessit.livejournal.com/1143396.html).
Indeed, it is not impossible to
imagine that some of these prisoners will be offered their freedom only if they
agree to fight in Ukraine. To the extent
that happens, Putin’s criminal invasion of Ukraine will take on not only a
non-Russian face but very much a criminal one as well.
No comments:
Post a Comment