Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 25 – Violence in
Kazakhstan and Armenia are the clearest sign yet that the post-Soviet space is
entering into its second phase of disintegration, the result of the rise of a
new generation that sees Moscow as the defender of the kleptocratic elites in
their countries and thus an obstacle to the kind of future they want, according
to Andrey Piontkovsky.
These events, the Russian
commentator argues, are anything but “accidental,” not because “someone from
Moscow is organizing them.” That cannot be the case because “all of them are
working against Moscow” and its interests. Instead, they are the product of
people taking arms “against the allies of Moscow” (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=57948F2C8F4E8).
“We sometimes forget,” Piontkovsky
continues, “that 25 years have already passed from the time of the first phase
of the disintegration of the USSR,” a country centered on Moscow and its horde
traditions and that Vladimir Putin has assured the world was simply Russia
functioning under a different name.
Since 1991, “a new generation of
people who have nothing in common with the Soviet Union and with the old elites
which have been penetrated by Soviet agents” has emerged. Twenty-five years ago, there was “a single
conspiracy of the entire Soviet communist nomenklatura” which gave up its old
ideology in order to grow rich.
That model “triumphed in all the
post-Soviet states, except the Baltic countries.” But now people in these countries
and especially the young are “very dissatisfied with Moscow because they see
that Muscovy is doing everything in order to support the regimes” which are
oppressing them and preventing them from a freer future.
This trend, he suggests, will continue,
sometimes peacefully and sometimes with violence, but it “will always be
anti-Moscow” at its base “because everyone understands perfectly that the main defender
and the main sponsor of all these bandit and thieving regimes is Moscow.”
According to Piontkovsky, “Moscow
will always support the existing regimes because only with these regimes in
place can it count on some influence and status.” But “what we see now in
Armenia and Kazakhstan is the beginning of the next stage of the disintegration
of the Soviet empire or more precisely the Muscovite empire.”
The rulers in Moscow “still do not
understand what is really going on,” the Russian commentator says; and
consequently, they are taking steps as in the case of their criminal actions in
Ukraine that are “accelerating these processes” of the disintegration of their
empire and making it irreversible.
That an opponent of the Putin
dictatorship and its aggressive behavior should be saying things may not come
as a surprise, but some pro-Moscow commentators are predicting the same
outcome,, although blaming it on Western conspiracies and Moscow’s failure up
to now to respond properly.
In a commentary today, one such
Kremlin supporter, Ruslan Gorevoym writes openly about “the end of the CIS,” pointedly
arguing that the West has decided to organize “color” revolutions in several
post-Soviet states and thus overload Moscow’s ability to respond (versia.ru/nachalas-zachistka-loyalnyx-k-rossii-liderov-postsovetskix-respublik).
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