Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 23 – A few days ago,
the Russian foreign ministry accused Great Britain not only of holding “the
world record for genocide” but of being behind the murders of Tsar Paul I and
the mad monk Grigory Rasputin. Few observers accept either charge, Moscow commentator
Aleksey Melnikov suggests, or should they.
But there is one aspect of Britain
that Russian officials don’t like even to mention, he says, because it
highlights an indictment of Moscow for an amazing and continuing failure: the
inability of Russia to form anything like the British Commonwealth, with its 53
member sttes and 2.4 billion people (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5ADB95F1B777A).
Why have Vladimir
Putin and other Russia leaders “who emerged from the Soviet past and the Soviet
special services not been able to establish since the disintegration of the USSR
anything like the British Commonwealth” which unites London and its former
colonies? Melnikov asks rhetorically.
“Why on ‘the post-Soviet space’ have
Putin and Lavrov instead carried out annexations and wars? Why have they made
Ukraine and Georgia opponents of Russia? Why of the countries of the former
USSR does Russia not have a single ally? Even Belarus having built its national
state with Russian resources will leave for Europe at the first chance it gets?”
“Why,” Melnikov asks, “do all the countries
of the former USSR look at Russia with fear?
-- a view none of the members of the British Commonwealth have of the
United Kingdom.
Instead, “Britain is an attractive
model for the countries of the Commonwealth. Its political system, press,
courts and free economy are an example and values which the member states want
to share … Thus, they feel drawn to Britain despite the colonial past,” the
Russian commentator continues.
The “new Russia” has none of these
attractive qualities, and no one wants to adopt its system for itself. Russia
is not only a bandit country but a backward one “in all senses.” And “therefore,
the surrounding countries are running from it.” And tragically, “all the causes
of this flight are from within Russia itself.”
“Britain was able to draw
conclusions from its colonial history,” Melnikov says.” It was able to create “a
vital organism on the ruins of its former empire, one which corresponded to the
spirit of the new times.” The new
Russia, however, “hasn’t learned anything from its history” and is simply angry
and seeking revenge for what occurred in 1991.
“This hasn’t ended well. Russia has
suffered a historic defeat, a strategic defeat. It remains isolated and
domestically weak … [And] it is incapable of offering itself or the world
anything which corresponds to the spirit of the times or gives positive prospects
for itself and for others.”
It is unclear how
long this “convulsion” is going to last. “But the end is clear and has been so
for a long time,” he says. A country can’t
live in the present-day world the way Russia is trying to. “And Russia will not
live in the future as it lives now. It must change its assessment of itself,
its history, and its place in the world … It must learn from Western countries.”
At some point, “Russia will become
part of the contemporary world, just as Germany and Japan did so after World
War II.” Whatever its leaders in Moscow think, it has no choice but to do so if
it is to survive.
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