Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 28 – As the 100th anniversary of the 1917 revolution that
led to a partial disintegration of the empire and the 25th
anniversary of the 1991 events that led to the demise of the USSR approach,
Russia appears to have entered “another round” of a cycle in which the pursuit
of imperial greatness “will lead to foreign pressure and internal
disintegration.”
That
is the judgment of Aleksandr Rubtsov, the head of the Moscow Center for the
Analysis of Ideological Processes, who says this outcome is even more likely
because Moscow’s “current imperial pretensions in large measure are virtual and
extremely limited in the resources” as far as the resources available to pursue
them are concerned (rbc.ru/opinions/society/26/02/2016/56cfe95f9a7947ed925e57de?from=typeindex%2Fopinion).
In addition, there is a clash
between “the sources of today’s hysteria about great power status” and the changing
“nature of empire” in the post-modern period.
The first reflects a longing for the past; the second, the fact that “geographic
closenss and the occupation of land means much less” than it did in the past.
Physical geography, Rubtsov
continues, “does not have its former importance;” and traditional empires based
on borders and control of territory “are giving way to information, financial,
technological, research, cultural and other former of empire.” In this new world, “annexation of territory
and hybrid wars don’t give very much.”
Worse, they are quite expensive, based
on “extremely primitive instincts” and mostly are “calculated in terms of their
psychological effect.”
Rubtsov points out that “the
disintegration of the USSR did not immediately become the geopolitical
catastrophe of the century,” as Vladimir Putin has termed it. For the first decade or so after 1991,
Russians focused on survival, development and modernization rather than on “global
greatness.”
“The new imperial spirit” arose, he
continues, partly as a result of propaganda that benefited Putin by distracting
the attention of Russians from problems he wasn’t solving and present him as a
real leader and partly as “the product of an unconscious striving to compensate”
for what Russian really felt was the denigration of their status.
But the sources are even deeper than
that, Rubtsov says, and reflect the way Russian rulers have looked not only at
foreign affairs but at areas already within their borders, considering all as
either under Russian power and influence or potentially so in the future, he suggests.
“The idea of rehabilitating a great power
spirit matured and was prepared gradually,” he continues. Moscow’s actions in Serbia, Chechnya and
Georgia reflected its growth, “but the official ideology in the main for a long
time was concentrated on other themes, on modernization, the overcoming of
technological backwardness, and a reduction of dependence on oil and gas.”
After
Putin returned for a third term, it became obvious to all that escaping
dependence on the sale of oil and gas abroad had failed as a political project
and that “dependence on the export of raw materials had only grown.” That made the promotion of imperial pride and
ensuing foreign aggression especially useful as ways of distracting attention.
But
there is much in the current cycle that recalls earlier ones, Rubtsov says. “Such
is the evolution of the idea of empire in Russia: a strong power with a clear
imperial mission – a place des armes of world revolution – a bastion of
progress and hope for humanity” and as a result disasters for the population
because those in power ultimately have nothing else to offer them.
“The
imperial spirt compensates for the lack of resolution of real problems and
informs domestic policy, including modernization of a post-Soviet type,” he
concludes. But the retreat from modernization
categorically raises the question about the survivability of the empire even in
its residual form.”
Whether
Russia can break out of this vicious circle is an open question, Rubtsov says. “The
symbolism of dates doesn’t mean anything, but ahead are the anniversaries of
the disintegration of the USSR and of a revolution which almost put a cross
over the [Russian] empire.”
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