Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 28 – Vladimir Putin
is celebrating Brexit and the wave of separatist challenges to European
countries that it has unleashed, Dmitry Zapolsky says; but his happiness is
likely to be short-lived because this latest separatist wave will soon engulf
Russia and lead to its disintegration.
Zapolsky, a Russian journalist who
was forced to move to Finland, has the unusual background of being a descendant
of a Scot entrepreneur who came to Russia at the end of the 18th
century. He thus offers a unique
perspective on the implications of the independence of Scotland for Russia (newsader.com/mention/brexit-separatistskiy-trend-kotoryy-razor/).
Britain may ultimately not leave the
EU even though Putin is treating that as a foregone conclusion and a victory
for the Kremlin, but the Brexit vote is going to lead to an increase in
separatist activity in Scotland, Catolonia, and the Basque country as well as
in parts of Italy and Belgium, Zapolsky says; and that will mean that Putin’s “euphoria
will quickly pass.”
“The process of regionalization
which has been restrained over the last decades by unbelievable efforts will
inevitably explode.” And “after several years,” it will come back to haunt
Russia. “Alas,” he says, “for the current system of power and governance in the
Russian Federation it is impossible to think up a worse trigger for disintegration
than the departure of England from the EU.”
Consequently, Zapolsky continues, “the
Kremlin will do everything so that the EU will not fall apart, although
Russians are now being told exactly the opposite on television.” Even if a reduced EU ended sanctions and even
if Donald Trump convinced the US not to pay attention to human rights in
Russia, Brexit if it spreads would be bad for Russia.
That is because, he says, even such
changes in Western policy would “not change the course of history: Russia’s
problems are not outside it but instead. And sanctions are not significantly
deepening them,” however much some hope or fear.
“All empires die in approximately the
same way; only the length of the agony varies in each case. In the case of the
Russian Empire, it has been going on already almost a hundred years.” But it
will end, and the future for Russia will be “still more difficult” than the
present-day situation.
“England as it has always done in
modern history has shown the trend line: a path of disintegration and
separatism,” Zapolsky says. “This cup will not pass by Russia.”
Zapolsky does not make a prediction
about when the separatist wave will again crash over Russia, but five
developments this week in the Russian Federation itself suggest that it may
happen even sooner than he appears to think:
·
First,
Mintimir Shaimiyev, the former president of Tatarstan, is reprising his role
from the 1990s and urging his republic’s senators to vote against repressive
new laws, a call that is likely to be taken up by other non-Russians if the
past is precedent (business-gazeta.ru/news/315174).
·
Second,
non-Russian nationalities are reaching out beyond their titular republics to
their co-ethnics elsewhere in Russia, a process that took off in the 1990s but
that has been actively opposed by Moscow since Putin came to power because it
can magnify the influence of these groups when they act jointly (natpressru.info/index.php?newsid=10554 and nazaccent.ru/content/21152-marijcy-iz-semi-regionov-sobralis-v.html).
·
Third,
the Russian defense ministry is studying how to fight color revolutions on the
territory of the Russian Federation, revolutions more likely to be triggered by
members of one or another nationality than by all of them together (kommersant.ru/doc/2753508).
·
Fourth,
some Kremlin propagandists like Sergey Markov are now saying that all
opposition to the Putin regime is a fifth column with close links to the
Ukrainian “junta” and that there must be no mercy shown to those who, working with
Ukraine and the West, want to destroy Russia (politnavigator.net/rossijjskaya-oppoziciya-tesno-svyazana-s-kievskojj-vlastyu-moskve-gotovyat-zhestokijj-majjdan.html).
·
And
fifth – and this is probably the best indicator – some Russian nationalist
commentators are saying that Brexit will lead to the disintegration of the United
States, the kind of projection that was favored by many Gorbachev-era analysts
arguing against the demise of the USSR 25 years ago (stoletie.ru/politika/breksit_i_ssha_532.htm).
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