Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 28 – Among the many archival
documents in Russia which remain classified are the letters of Nicholas II to
his wife and orders he issued during World War I, quite possibly the result of
the efforts of those who want to canonize him, according to journalist Sergey
Kuzmitsky.
He
points out that documents can be kept classified far longer than the law
normally allows if that is necessary to protect state secrets “or at the
request of relatives of the people who figure in the papers” (topcor.ru/1442-kakie-dokumenty-rossiyskoy-imperii-i-sssr-do-sih-por-ne-rassekrecheny.html).
This grows out of
Soviet-era practice. Already in 1918, the Bolsheviks began to be concerned with
preserving tsarist archives and keeping ordinary people from having access to
them. In 1938, this control was identified
when these archival documents were put under the administration of the NKVD
which decided to classify most of them.
These documents remained under the
control of the secret services until 2016, when they were transferred to the
office of the Russian president, himself a former KGB officer. And thus Vladimir Putin has the last word on
the declassification of the tsarist documents and other archival materials now
classified secret.
Among the archival papers that are
still classified secret in most but not in all cases are the archives of the
KGB and its Soviet and tsarist predecessors, some of the papers concerning the
purge trials of the 1930s, and the personal papers of prominent people like
Vysotsky, Solzhenitsyn and Ryzhkov.
“It is possible,” Kuzmitsky says, “that
many of the old Russian secrets have significance even today and must be
preserved in that state. But many simply haven’t been declassified only because
earlier there were so many secrets that it will require a great deal of effort
to make decisions about them.”
However, there are compelling reasons
to declassify as much as possible of these older documents, he suggests.
Otherwise, Russians will be confronted with a situation in which their past
will be defined by those with an agenda rather than on the basis of the facts
that can be learned from the archives.
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