Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 13 – Few concepts are
more often misunderstood than that of “a failed state.” Such a state is not one on which there are no
powerful institutions, but rather it is one in which there is no central
authority which exercises control over actions on all of its territory and
which at least tries to enforce its own laws on the population.
Tragically, there are more failed
states around than many would like to admit; and one of them may very well be
the Russian Federation. In a brief
comment today, Russian regionalist Vadim Shtepa says that it is “a failed state”
because laws inscribed in its own criminal code are not enforced (rufabula.com/author/shtepa/614).
Specifically, he says, Moscow shows
little or no interest in enforcing Paragraph 353 of Section 34 of that code.
That provision specifies that anyone who plans, prepares, unleashes or conducts
an aggressive war is subject to imprisonment for a period of seven to fifteen
years.” And anyone who engages in a war of aggression faces “the loss of
freedom for ten to 20 years.
Such legal provisions may seem meaningless
to many. After all, no one is likely to bring Vladimir Putin to justice for his
violations of this paragraph. But they
are not unimportant because they can become the basis for soldiers and others to
refuse to obey illegal orders to engage in such actions.
And that could become increasingly
significant if more soldiers leave their posts as some have already in order to
avoid being sent to Ukraine. On that, see “Russian Soldiers Increasingly
Deserting Their Units to Avoid Being Sent to Fight in Ukraine,” July 11, 2015,
at windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2015/07/russian-soldiers-increasingly-deserting.html.
For
more general problem of Russia as a failed state, see “Russia’s Aggression Now
Reflects RSFSR’s Past Failure to Become a State, Pornitkov Say,” March 18,
2015, at windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2015/03/russias-aggression-now-reflects-rsfsrs.html;
and this author’s “Russia as a Failed State,” Baltic Defense Review, 12:2 (2004), at
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