Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 20 – Aleksandr Bortnikov,
the director of the FSB, says that the political repressions of the 1930s were
often justified because the archives show that there really were active conspiracies
directed at replacing or overthrowing the leadership of the country (rg.ru/2017/12/19/aleksandr-bortnikov-fsb-rossii-svobodna-ot-politicheskogo-vliianiia.html).
Specifically, he said in an
interview with Rossiiskaya gazeta
that although many assume there was “massive fabrication of accusations” under
Stalin, “archival materials testify about the existence of an objective side in
a significant portion of the criminal cases, including those underlying the
well-known public trials.”
“The plans of the supporters of L. Trotsky
for the replacement or even liquidation of J. Stalin and his comrades in arms
in the leadership of the VKP(b) are hardly an invention,” the chekist says. Nor
are the links of “these conspirators with foreign special services” or the
involvement of many of those charged in corruption and bureaucratic
arbitrariness.
Not only is this disturbing as yet
another indication that the Russian security services are proud of their
heritage rather than being ashamed of it (agonia-ru.com/archives/14582 and
vz.ru/society/2017/12/20/900363.html),
but it suggests that the people heading this agency and those above them view
repression on the basis of flimsy or invented charges as normal and justified.
Thus, one is compelled to answer the
question Open Russia asks this week – “does Russia need a new intelligence
service or can the FSB be reformed” (openrussia.org/notes/717436/)
--- in the following way: only the complete lustration of all Soviet
intelligence figures from positions of power, including the one at the very
top, might offer a chance to change for the better rather than a return to the
past.
No comments:
Post a Comment