Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 27 – When the Soviet
Union disintegrated, those who came to power in most of the successor states
were members of the second or third-tier of the Soviet elite; and they quickly
reproduced at the level of the new states systems which reflected their origins
and experiences.
That raises a serious problem for
the future, one that few people have wanted to face: If the Russian Federation
disintegrates, can any of the “successor” states avoid the same fate, with the
new group of leaders coming almost exclusively from the same elite that has
driven that country into its current disaster?
One who has is Fyodor
Krasheninnikov, a Urals writer and activist who has just issued the second edition
of his 2008 book, “After Russia.” In a
review of it on the Rufabula portal, Vadim Shtepa, a Karelian regionalist now
living in exile in Estonia, provides insights into the Urals writer’s ideas (rufabula.com/articles/2016/04/26/after-dividing-of-amoeba).
Krasheninnikov’s vision of the
future, one that reflects his experience of having lived through the
disintegration of the USSR, is dark. He casts it in the form of a dystopian
novel in order to avoid criminal charges since, unlike Shtepa, he continues to
live in and thus be subject to Russian laws.
His book is based on the premise
that the Russian Federation breaks apart into several regional states. “But
then,” Shtepa summarizes, “in one of the central-Russian republics power is
seized by a former policeman who dreams of ‘the greatness of power,’ and to his
surprise easily takes Moscow and begins from there a campaign for ‘the rebirth
of Russia.’”
But while this imperial project does
not succeed across the entire space now occupied by the Russian Federation, the
attitudes of the new rulers continue to have a large and typically negative
impact on almost all of the new states, in much the same way that the attitudes
of the rulers of most of the new post-Soviet states have.
It could hardly be otherwise,
Krasheninnikov argues in his book. These people were part and parcel of the previous
regime; and they simply acted in the same way that they had on a larger stage
on their new and smaller ones. His view is so bleak, Shtepa says, that it could
almost be Kremlin propaganda which suggests that however bad things are, they
could get worse.
Shtepa
in his writings has also discussed what a post-Soviet future might be like. And
like Krasheninnikov, he recognizes its dark side, having talked about what
would happen if Russia simply divided “like an amoeba” with each of the new
parts reproducing all of the old in miniature (rufabula.com/articles/2013/09/02/empire-as-amoeba).
And also like the Urals writer,
Shtepa has acknowledged that if this happens in the next round of imperial
devolution, the outcome may be even worse because “the Kremlin ‘vertical’ will
not disappear but only multiply in dozens” of mini-states “with no less dictatorial
approaches.”
But in contrast to Krasheninnikov,
Shtepa holds out the possibility of a more optimistic outcome at least for
portions of the post-Russian space. He says that if the successors can agree on
a treaty-based federation or confederation, the controls built into those
systems may prevent the values of the past from being reproduced.
But he gives the last word to
Krasheninnikov who says that he wrote his novel not to describe what he wants
to see happen but as a warning about what could if nothing is done. He suggests
he does not see the future as unbearable because it may be radically different
than the present but because it may be exactly the same.
That is what the disintegration of
the USSR taught him, the writer says.
The future can be exactly like the past.
Had he written that “in place of Russia suddenly would appear a multitude
of flourishing democratic states … that would have been a utopia. “Unfortunately,” he adds, he “does not see any
preconditions” for that.
Nevertheless, Krasheninnikov
concludes, he does not consider his book “a sentence or even more a prophecy.
This is precisely an anti-utopia, more about today and about how that threatens
our future.” Russians need to think hard
about how to avoid that and thus avoiding falling in the trap of a vicious and
ever-repeating circle.
No comments:
Post a Comment