Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 9 – Russia has
succeeded in holding its conquests only by conducting significant ethnic
cleansing, according to Ukrainian commentator Petr Oleshchuk, who points to the
difference between Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, on the one hand, and
Kaliningrad, on the other, as indicative of what Moscow is doing in Crimea and the
Donbas.
Many believe that the three Baltic
countries regained their independence because of American non-recognition
policy, but in fact, Oleshchuk says, they did so because each retained “a quite
powerful nation” which “struggled for itself and won.” In Kaliningrad, Moscow eliminated all the
local people by killing and deportation, and the region remains part of Russia.
The lesson of those different
outcomes explains Moscow’s actions in Ukraine now where it is conducting “the
largest ethnic cleansing of the 21st century, comparable with the cleansing
of earlier years” and involving “the destruction of everything Ukrainian and in
the case of Crimea also the Tatar” (glavpost.com/post/7jun2015/blogs/41290-petr-oleschuk-vse-geopoliticheskie-uspehi-rf-stroilis-na-etnicheskih-chistkah.html).
If
Moscow has the time to carry out its program of ethnic cleansing in the Donbas
and Crimea, there will be no one left to demand the return of these territories
to their lawful sovereign Ukraine. The Russian government knows that, and it is
acting accordingly, Oleshchuk argues.
Such
a strategy, of course, is nothing new. “Have you never wondered who populated
Siberia or the Volga region before the Russians?” he asks rhetorically. These
weren’t empty deserts; there were various nations there. But with the coming of
Russian arms, some were “assimilated” and some were “destroyed.”
As
a result, Oleshchuk says, these non-Russian regions historically became “Russian
from time immemorial.”
In
the case of the Donbas and Crimea, of course, the current rulers in the Kremlin
do not have to start from scratch. All
they must do, the Ukrainian commentator points out, is continue the work that
was “done in Stalin’s times … destroy everything of other ethnic groups,
resettle and build an advance post.”
If
Moscow succeeds, the fate of these regions will be like Kaliningrad; if it
doesn’t, their fate will be like that of the Baltic countries.
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