Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 19 – Maria Zakharova,
the Russian foreign ministry’s spokesperson, said more than she perhaps
intended when she declared that the Crimeans, having again become part of the
Russian state, “returned us to ourselves as well,” according to Moscow
commentator Aleksandr Yakovenko.
The Crimean Anschluss, he writes, is
as many have noted “the greatest international crime committed in the 21st
century.” But living in Putin’s Russia, there is no point in talking “about
law, let alone international law.” Instead, Yakovenko argues, “let us talk
about consequences” (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=58CE1D504B4FC).
Crimea in reality,
the commentator points out, “has divided the history of Putin’s Russia into two
parts: ‘before’ and ‘after’” the Anschluss. “Before Crimea, Putin’s Russia was
a dictatorship with four main problems: total corruption, the irreplaceability
of the authorities, the zombification of the population, and the absence of
human rights (and rights in general).”
“After Crimea,” he continues, “all
these problems intensified. But in first place arose a new one, which eclipsed
all the rest: Russia was converted into the main threat to world civilization.”
The Anschluss “has made Russia a world outcast, inserted into the brains of
Russians the psychology of a besieged fortress and forced them to be glad of
sanctions and to unity around the leader.”
“Crimea has radically changed the
level of the rhetoric of public persons in the media toward complete idiotism,
rabid xenophobia, imperialism and anti-Westernism.” It has destroyed the
influence of the Russian opposition, “part of which simply ceased to be such
because it supported Putin’s annexation” and part because it needed to in order
to survive.
The Crimean Anschluss “significantly
worsened the real quality of life of Russians, driving many of them into
poverty and what is more depriving them of prospects for the future.” It has
made “40 million Ukrainians enemies of Russia” because no one can explain to
them “why we 140 million cowards can’t stop a single lieutenant colonel” from
taking this action.
In short, Yakovenko says, “the
jubilee of the annexation of Crimea is very shameful, very criminal and very,
very stupid.”
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