Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 14 – Soviet people
joked that if you lived anywhere in the USSR there were only “three ways out” –
Domodedovo, Sheremetyevo and Vnukovo – the three airports of Moscow. But it was
no laughing matter that to go from one oblast to its neighbor, residents often
had to fly thousands of kilometers out of their way via the capital city.
But it is not often appreciated that
in the 25 years since the Soviet Union collapsed, air routes within the Russian
Federation have become more rather than less focused on the capital, the result
of the collapse of regional carriers, the use of private jets by elites, and
the increasing centralization of Putin’s regime.
In 1990, Pavel Luzin points out, there
were in fact far more airports (over 4,000 versus fewer than 990 now), fewer
flights which originated or ended in Moscow (26 percent as opposed to 74
percent today), and fewer regional carrier flights (27 percent compared to
under three percent now) (afterempire.info/2017/08/14/avia/).
Given the enormous
distances within Russia and the absence of reliable roads and railways in many
areas, a network of flights that allows people to move around the country is
essential if Russia is to have any hope of developing normally. But the increasing
Moscow-centricity of that network precludes such a trend.
Since Vladimir Putin became
president, Luzin writes, “control over all these routes little by little has
become concentrated in one center – in Moscow,” a reflection of the fact that
businesses and political decisions are all based there and that except for
those involved in extractive industries – who have private planes – everyone needs
to be there.
Indeed, most of the remaining inter-city
routes that don’t link into Moscow are serviced by much smaller planes than
those which do pass through the capital; and consequently the hyper-centralization
of the air network is even more extreme than even the gross statistics suggest.
For the situation to change, the
analyst continues, four “fundamental” shifts are required. First, human freedom
must be recognized “at the political level” as the highest value. Second, “the regulating and controlling
functions of Russian power must be reduced as much as possible. Third, there
must be a recognition of the importance of local administration.
And fourth, Luzin concludes, “Russian
society must be opened again to the world and to itself.” Unfortunately, none of these is likely, and “the
colonial model of administration” appears certain to continue for some time and
perhaps even get worse, far worse in fact than in Soviet times.
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