Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 23 – Moscow writers,
most prominently Academician Valery Tishkov, routinely suggest that “the
Russian world” the Kremlin talks about is analogous to “’the worlds’ of the European
colonial powers which are spheres of cultural influence on the planetary civilization,”
Mikhail Feldman says.
But that is a fundamental mistake,
he continues, not only because “’the worlds’ of the English, the Spanish, the
Dutch and other European imperialists were born only with the collapse of their
colonial empires” but also because the Russian “world” came into existence
alongside the empire and was/is based on military conquest and authoritarian
rule.
“It is no accident,” the Russian
commentator writes on the AfterEmpire portal today, that the person usually
given credit for the term in the Russian case was tsarist General Mikhail
Chernyayev who led the forces that brutally seized Tashkent in 1865 and the
culturally alien peoples around it (afterempire.info/2017/08/23/russian-countries/).
“Even today,” Feldman
continues, “this ‘world’ is associated not with cultural expansion but with
soldiers without identifying badges, with the downing of the Boeing, and with
the arrest of civic activists who want to return to their native city the
historic name of Koenigsberg” – in short with military power not cultural
influence.
One Moscow commentator has suggested
that “Russians will cease to exist in the form in which they have existed for
centuries if there is no Empire,” an argument that implies that “Russians are
incapable of self-organization” and can exist only under a powerful and
paternalistic Russian state.
This might seem “logical,” Feldman says, “if one considered Russians
exclusively as coming from ‘the nucleus’ of the empire … but if there is a
metropolitan center, this means that there are colonies. And in ‘the Russian
world’ are not only the North Caucasus or the recently seized Crimea.”
It is “all of us: Tambov, Voronezh,
Veliky and Nizhny Novgorod … the entire country from Kaliningrad to
Vladivostok, the source of resources for the imperial (or to put it in a
politically correct way, the federal) center, comfortably situated in the borders
of the Moscow Ring Road.”
A Russian world analogous to those
of the Western imperial powers could come into existence only if the Russian
empire disintegrates, Feldman argues. Then and only then could there be a
Russian “world” like the European ones that include the US, Canada, Brazil or
Australia.
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