Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 25 – Russian blogger
Pavel Pryanikov has performed a useful service by calling attention to the fact
that the phrase “the rotting West” is not some new Moscow invention but rather
a term of art invented in 1857 by Stepan Shevryov, a Slavophile specialist on
Dante who worked in the Imperial foreign ministry (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5795AF24D3AD8).
What makes this recollection
important is not just the delicious irony that Shevryov was forced to flee his
country and died in “the rotting West” he so despised but rather that it points
to an underlying continuity in Russian thought over that period, a continuity many
in Russia and perhaps even more in the West continually seek to deny only then
to be disappointed.
Each new twist and turn of Russian
behavior is proclaimed by some in both places to be either the appearance of “a
new heaven and a new earth” that will open the way to East-West cooperation of
hitherto unheard of dimensions or a temporary backing away from that “bright
future” that everyone should look beyond.
But beyond the obvious problems of professing
to see a secular trend in one direction in a situation that for a very long
time has been marked by a circular pattern of boom and bust developments, there
are three aspects of this situation that should be kept in mind especially in
the West.
First, while it may be true that
countries do not have permanent enemies or friends but only permanent
interests, it is certainly the case that those interests reflect not only
geography and history but ideology. And
in the case of Russia, suspicion and hostility to the West, rooted in a sense
of spiritual superiority, has long played a role and shows no sign of
dissipating.
Second, such continuing suspicion
and hostility does not mean that Russians are not prepared to partake of the
benefits of the West, just as Shevryov did by fleeing, but only that they see
Russia and the West as fundamentally irreconcilable even if such partial
rapprochements occasionally take place.
And third, Russian rulers have
cleverly used such partial rapprochements and the expectation of many in the
West that they are more than that to win concessions from other countries whose
leaders increasingly focus on the short term rather than on longer term
continuities.
The world is witness to this sorry
spectacle once again: ever more Western experts and policy makers are calling
for a new rapprochement with Moscow which in turn is promoting such notions confident
that only cooperation between Russia and the West will make it possible to
solve all the problems of the world or at least prevent a disaster.
Some of these appeals are no doubt
genuine, but the history of the last several centuries strongly suggests that
they will again lead to disappointment given that the Western parties to such
accords constantly look for the good in Russia while Russian rulers continue to
believe they are dealing with a “rotting” West they can exploit and defeat.
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