Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 9 – It is bad
enough when Russian government agencies including the police and the security
services repress their populations; it is even worse when the government
succeeds in mobilizing members of the population, including some of the most
vicious ones, to attack and even kill the regime’s opponents.
The reason that the latter is worse
is that such an approach allows the Kremlin to avoid responsibility for what it
is doing, in this case conducting “a hybrid war” against its own people just as
it did earlier by using forces without insignia in Ukraine and is increasingly
doing using mercenaries in the Donbass and Syria.
Still worse, these forces often act
without even the minimum constraints that Russian bureaucracies sometimes feel
compelled to maintain and thus behave more violently and viciously against their
targets than do even the violent and vicious Russian police, Russian FSB, and
other Russian siloviki organizations.
It is terribly important that people
of good will both in Russia and in the West recognize Putin has now brought his
“hybrid war” home; and for that, such people can be grateful for a new commentary
by Danila Aleksandrov who notes that “Hybrid War is Being Conducted Not Only
with Neighboring Countries” (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5A7D4B7FCA603).
“On this day, two years ago,” the
commentator says, he was attacked by persons unknown after he had received threats
of various kinds. “This was not the first and not the last attack in Petersburg
connected with politics.” But then it appeared to be about intimidating people.
Now it involves serious physical injury and even death.
The authorities have put out lists
of people they don’t approve of, and those who support them have both used
those lists to identify targets, sometimes adding their own enemies as
well. The latest in this sad series, one
that shows that Putin’s “hybrid war” has come back to Russia occurred a week
ago when persons unknown tried to kill rights activist Dinar Idrisov.
Aleksandrov is not the only one to
report on this phenomenon, and it is far from being limited to St.
Petersburg. The Slavic Centre for Law
and Justice reports that the current persecution of Baptist groups involves
just as was the case in Soviet times “volunteers” and state institutions (sclj.ru/news/detail.php?SECTION_ID=487&ELEMENT_ID=7767).
And earlier this week, Radio Svoboda
reports, members of the pro-Kremlin SERB Russian nationalist group showed up at
a Navalny office alongside police to make the regime’s show of force even more
intimidating (svobodaradio.livejournal.com/3368707.html).
Meanwhile, the SOVA human rights site has documented other cases as well.
The Kremlin used the instruments of “hybrid
war” in Ukraine to confuse and slow the reaction of the world to Putin’s
actions there. It is even more important that he not be allowed to use the same
tactic against his own people because
that will open the way to an even more brutal dictatorship just as the Nazi’s “bully
boys” did in German cities in the early 1930s.
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