Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 15 – Stalin deported
the Crimean Tatars and other Turkic peoples from the southern portions of the
USSR because he was preparing for a war with Turkey, Ukrainian historian Sergey
Gromenko pointed out in a lecture at Kyiv’s National Museum of the History of
Ukraine.
“The real cause of the resettlement
of the Crimean Tatars [then],” the specialist at the Ukrainian Institute of
National Memory argued, “was that Stalin was preparing for a war with Turkey.”
In Stalin’s understanding, Crimea and the Caucasus were to become the main
theaters of military operations” in this war (memory.gov.ua/news/rosiiske-naselennya-pochalo-kilkisno-perevazhati-v-krimu-lishe-pislya-1917-roku
and qha.com.ua/ru/obschestvo/istorik-rasskazal-pochemu-stalin-prikazal-deportirovat-krimskih-tatar/152426/).
“In 1944,” Gromenko said, “this war
almost began. But when in the second half of the 1940s,” the Soviet leader
returned to this idea, Turkey had already joined NATO, and “the US fleet
protected its shores. Thus, a war with Turkey did not begin but the rear areas
[of such a potential conflict] were protected.
The Ukrainian historian did not draw
parallels with the current situation, but they are so obvious and disturbing
that one cannot fail to see them. If one
accepts his reading of the events of 1944, then it is entirely possible that
Vladimir Putin occupied Crimea not just to boost his notion of “a Russian world”
but to set the stage for a war with Turkey.
And if that is the case, then Putin’s
actions over the last year and the current upsurge in tensions between Moscow
and Ankara are not a set of disconnected events but rather part of a larger and
more ominous plan by which the Kremlin leader may hope to “correct” what he
sees as Khrushchev’s mistake in handing over Crimea to Ukraine.
Instead, it could be that Putin is
seeking to achieve something Russian leaders hoped for during World War I: the
dismemberment of Turkey and Russian control of the straits of the Bosphorus and
the Dardanelles. Some Russian
nationalist and Orthodox commentators have raised that possibility.
But one thing they don’t mention
that perhaps Putin should recall: It was the exposure of the secret treaties
between Russia and the Western allies on this point that led to the first
splits in the Provisional Government in 1917 that ultimately contributed to the
weakening of that government to the point that it fell.
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