Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 27 – The downing
of a Russian warplane that violated Turkish airspace means that for Russians,
Moscow’s war in Syria has ceased to be the computer game that it has largely
been presented on state-controlled television and become something immediate and far more
dangerous (ej.ru/?a=note&id=28990).
But it has also highlighted
something else: in this latest development of the conflict between Moscow and
the West, it has shown that Turkey has allies, while Russia has only vassals
and thus is far more isolated than Putin’s statements and pro-Kremlin
commentators have suggested, according to Vitaly Portnikov.
In a commentary on
Espreso.tv, the Ukrainian analyst points out that after the shooting down of
the Russian warplane, Ankara turned to its NATO allies and received complete
support for its defense of Turkish airspace, highlighting that Turkey is not
Russia’s ally but rather “an ally of the civilized world” (ru.espreso.tv/article/2015/11/26/nenuzhnye_soyuznyky_rossyy).
Equally instructive, however, is the
fact that Putin did not think to turn for support to its supposed allies in the
Organization of the Collective Security Treaty or even garner the backing of
its members for Russia’s position, Portnikov continues. Moscow propagandists
had to search for twitter posts by Kazakhstan and Belarusian bureaucrats to
suggest Russia had their backing.
The reason that Moscow didn’t get
the support from its “allies” that the Kremlin expected is because these “allies”
are in fact “colonies,” Portnikov says. That is, they are countries “without
obvious sovereignty of their own,” dependent on or fearful of Moscow rather
than partners with it on behalf of anything in common.
“Belarus,” he says, “depends on
Russian aid. Kazakhstan is afraid of potential Russian aggression and
propaganda among its ethnic Russians. Kyrgyzstan depends on Russian assistance
and is afraid of a new round of instability” and “the economy of Tajikistan
depends on the slave labor of migrants.”
What kind of “allies” could these
be? Allies “in support of dictators? But even dictators,” Portnikov points out,
“value their own freedom of action, because their greatest dream is that the metropolitan
center will weaken, that it will collapse, that they won’t depend on it anymore
and can instead make use of it.”
Putin should have no doubt that this
is what Lukashenka and Nazarbayev and Rakhmon and Atambayev want. And “if even
in Yerevan, the capital of a country whose border with Turkey is closed and
with which it does not have diplomatic relations isn’t hurrying to support
Moscow, what could one demand from Mensk and Astana?”
“The destruction of the Russian
plane over Turkey is not “a knife in the back,’” as Putin continues to claim if
for no other reason than that “Turkey is not an ally of Russia.” Russia doesn’t have allies, but it is going
to receive “a real ‘knife in the back’ from Kazakhstan, Belarus and its other
vassals.”
That prospect is one of the reasons
why Duma deputy Yevgeny Fedorov has declared that “the goal of the Russian
Federation is to seize all the republics of the former Soviet Union and restore
the USSR in its borders as of 1945 (that is, including the Baltic countries)”
and he is insisting that “this is not his personal opinion” alone (aboutru.com/2015/11/20897/).
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