Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 16 – A Russian
nationalist with a long track record of hatred toward Belarus says that Moscow
should, on the basis of the logic Moscow has used to annex Crimea, take back
the portions now within the borders of the Belarusian Republic that were once
part of the RSFSR.
Not only does his argument ignore
the extent to which the borders of Belarus were changed numerous times by
Stalin, particularly at the end of World War II, but it lays a delayed action
mine not only under the Belarusian Republic but also under Kazakhstan which in
the 1920s was part of the RSFSR as well.
And the threat to Belarus is
underscored by Kirill Averyanov-Minsky’s suggestion that if Mensk does not give
the territory back voluntarily, Moscow could help set up peoples republics in eastern
Belarus much as it has in eastern Ukraine (sputnikipogrom.com/history/32029/bssr;
discussed at ru.delfi.lt/abroad/belorussia/smi-russkie-nacionalisty-stavyat-pod-somnenie-celostnost-belarusi.d?id=67439062).
Averyanov-Minsky, a nationalist with
ties to many close to the Kremlin, says that “everyone knows that in1954 Crimea
was illegally transferred from the RSFSR to the Ukrainian SSR,” and some know
that in 1918, Moscow handed over the Donetsk-Krivorog Soviet Republic to Soviet
Ukraine.”
But “few know that in the 1920s,”
Moscow transferred from the RSFSR to the Belarusian SSR Vitebsk, Mohilev and
Gomel oblasts without any ceremony at all.
According to Averyanov-Minsky, these were never Belarusian lands and
should not belong to Belarus now or in the future.
“Comrade Lukashenka,” the
commentator continues, is promoting the Belarusianization of these territories
in order to hold the forever, apparently out of the belief that “today in the
Krelin sit precisely such Soviet multi-nationalists as did in the 1920s.” One
can understand why he might think that, Averyanov-Minsky says, but it need not
be that way.
If the Belarusian leader continues
in his misconceptions, the Russian nationalist commentator says, “it is
impossible to exclude the possibility of the appearance of peoples republics in
the east (and then possibly in the west as well) of the present-day Republic of
Belarus.”
Averyanov-Minsky says that all these
changes could happen quickly: He says that the new law the Russian Duma is
considering concerning the “illegality” of the transfer of Crimea from the
RSFSR to the Ukrainian SSR in 1954 could be amended to include Russian areas
given to Belarus as well.
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