Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 1 – An article in
a German newspaper suggesting that residents of Russia’s Pskov oblast want good
relations with Estonia and Latvia and do not support Moscow’s “’aggressive tone’”
has raised the hackles of a Russian commentator who argues that the West will
fail if it tries to set the border regions of the country against the center.
On the RuBaltic portal which often
serves as Moscow’s mouthpiece about the Baltic countries, Aleksandr Nosovich
takes offense at an article by Klaus-Helge Donath in Berlin’s “Tageszeitung”
about the situation in Pskov oblast and both pro-Western and anti-Moscow
sentiments there.
(Nosovich’s article which appeared
yesterday can be found at rubaltic.ru/article/politika-i-obshchestvo/300916-prigranichye/.
Donath’s, which was originally published on September 16 is available in German
at taz.de/Archiv-Suche/!5335817/
and in Russian translation at inosmi.ru/social/20160916/237868686.html.)
According to Nosovich, the West has “decided
to use the residents of border regions” of the Russian Federation against
Moscow. He draws that conclusion on the basis of the Donath article and
predicts that the West will expand such efforts in other regions of Russia,
including Kaliningrad.
The Russian commentator quotes
Donath’s observation that “on the whole, the situation in Pskov with its
200,000 residents does not look especially good. Many homeless people follow
tourists from one church to another in the hopes of receiving some money from
them. More than that, every fifth resident of Pskov lives ‘below the
established minimum’” income.
According to the German journalist,
Nosovich continues, “industrial enterprises have left the city and over the
last six years, the population has fallen by six percent which as the local
press writes, ‘exceeds the figures from the period” of World War II. As a result, “in the city, the situation in
fact is tense” because residents compare their fate with that of the wealthier
Baltic countries and St. Petersburg.
Nosovich says that Donath’s comment
about population losses is “only the most obvious” of his mistaken claims. Between 1940 and 1945, Pskov oblast’s
population fell from 1.6 million to 500,000, while between 1989 and 2010, it
declined only from 870,000 to 650,000. The Russian commentator implies but
doesn’t show that Donath’s other arguments are wrong.
He does say that the German
journalist “manipulates the good-neighborly attitudes of Pskov residents to their
Baltic neighbors and pushes his readers to the conclusion that the residents of
the Russian border region are oriented in their development to Estonia and
Latvia and do not support the foreign policy of Russia.”
Pskov residents, Donath says, aren’t
hostile to Estonia and Latvia and they do not understand Moscow’s militaristic
tone. Moreover, “20 percent of the residents of [Pskov’s] border regions are
citizens both of Russia and of the EU,” that is, they are citizens of Estonia
and Latvia, two EU member states, and thus are within the Shengen zone.
Nosovich says that such comments
raise “several questions.” First, according to him, no one in Pskov could have
heard Moscow’s “’militant tone’” toward the Baltic countries because Moscow has
never displayed that. Second, Donath
insults the Balts by comparing them with a region in Russia rather than with
Russia as a whole.
And third, according to Nosovich,
Donath is wrong to suggest any problems Pskov residents have are the result of
Moscow’s policies. According to him, many of their problems have arisen because
Estonia hasn’t been willing to allow a special visa regime for border area
residents even though as many as 33,000 Pskovites have Estonian passports.
Thus, the Russian commentator says,
Donath’s article represents not some accidental publication but the
manifestation of a new anti-Moscow policy in the West based on an attempt to
use “the friendly and good-neighborly attitudes of residents of the border
regions of Russia toward EU countries” against Moscow.
“It remains to be seen,” Nosovich
says, “how this will develop in the future.
We now can expect Western reports that the residents of Kaliningrad
oblast feel themselves as Little Lithuania and do not support Putin’s plans,
already proven and not subject to doubt, to occupy Vilnius.”
No such articles have yet appeared,
but today, a RUSSIAN news agency reported that the situation in the Russian
exclave of Kaliningrad is now so dire that stevedores working in the port there
are saying “we will not survive if we don’t reach agreements with Lithuania and
Belarus (regnum.ru/news/economy/2187281.html).
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