Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 20 – Earlier this
month, former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev said that there are “many
Catalonias” within the Russian Federation, a declaration that caused some
analysts to try to identify who they might be and how they do might pursue
independence from Moscow (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2017/10/could-urals-republic-become-one-of.html).
But now that Madrid has decided to
invoke the 155th article of the Spanish constitution to deprive the Catalans
of their current autonomy and thus keep them within that country (profile.ru/politika/item/120682-avtonomiya-na-grani),
the Catalonian case may have a larger impact on what happens next in Russia
that Barcelona’s original drive appeared likely to have.
That is because such an action
almost certainly would be used by Vladimir Putin as cover for what he is
reportedly considering doing either in the run-up to the March 2018 elections
or shortly thereafter: eliminating the non-Russian republics within the Russian
Federation in the name of creating a single Russian nation.
(Among those suggesting that Putin
is planning exactly that is Fauziya Bayramova, head of Tatarstan’s Ittifaq
Independence Party (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2017/10/putins-goal-for-russia-is-one-people.html).
See also kavkazr.com/a/uprazdnenie-respublik-s-oglyadkoi-na-chechnyu/28799980.html.)
Putin has already accused the West
of double standards in its handling of demands for secession by ethnic
minorities. He would undoubtedly step up such criticism if Madrid went so far
as to eliminate Catalan autonomy. At the
very least, that would keep some in the West from criticizing the Kremlin if it
moved to suppress the non-Russian republics inside Russia.
Obviously, the two situations are so
different that Putin’s invocation of this case would be dishonest, although no
more so than many of the other arguments he has used on other occasions. But
there is one way in which the two situations are very similar: suppressing
autonomy in either case almost certainly will lead to the radicalization of
views in both.
Moscow’s Vzglyad newspaper in its issue today warns of this danger in
Catalonia (vz.ru/world/2017/10/20/138903.html).
But its argument certainly applies to the non-Russian republics of Russia as
well. Indeed, one might even read this article as a case of Aesopian language
criticism of Putin’s policies, yet another revenant from the Soviet past.
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