Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 16 – Because the
Soviet Union disintegrated along ethnic lines, most observers inside the
Russian Federation and abroad focus on separatist ideas and movements in the
non-Russian republics and thus miss one of the most interesting developments in
Vladimir Putin’s Russia: separatist ideas in predominantly Russian areas.
The current author has argued that “regionalism
is the nationalism of the next Russian revolution” because Moscow has treated
Russian regions as bad or worse than it has treated non-Russian ones and
because Russian ethno-national identity is far weaker than many in Moscow and
elsewhere believe (afterempire.info/2016/12/28/regionalism/).
There are many websites reflecting
the views of Russian regionalists, but often those who run them have been
forced to emigrate by the Russian authorities. As a result, the best evidence
for the spread of separatist ideas in predominantly ethnic Russian regions is
often provided by those who attack these ideas, both Russian officials and Russian
nationalist writers.
This week offers two such examples,
one, the trial and conviction of an unnamed Russian regionalist in Murmansk (afterempire.info/2018/05/15/free-murmansk/
and sud51.com/criminal/276) and the second, an attack on what the Russian
commentator calls “sleeping separatism” in the Russian Far East (stoletie.ru/vzglyad/spashhij_separatizm_782.htm).
Earlier this spring, a resident of
Severomorsk was tried on charges of threatening the territorial integrity of
Russia, charges equivalent since 2014 to extremism, by calling for a referendum
on the separation of Murmansk oblast from Russia. He was convicted and sentenced to 18 months
in prison on a suspended basis as well as 18 months of probation.
One of the interesting aspects of
this case is that local judges refused to give the man’s name lest they attract
attention to him.
Meanwhile, at the other end of the
Russian Federation in Vladivostok, Igor Romanov, editor of the Russian
nationalist Bereg Rus portal writes that “the separatist threat in the
Primorsky region and in the Far East is completely real but now it is hidden
and in a sleepy state…”
Because the United States and other
foreign powers want to gain access to and control over the natural resources of
Russia east of the Urals, he says, any weakening of Russian power in the
enormous regions will “instantly” lead this sleeping enemy to awaken and
threaten Russian control there.
At present, Romanov says, “our
people has been weakened.” Many in Moscow and Vladivostok are more interested
in getting money than in defending their country. And such people have too much influence, he
says. They need to be replaced with real patriots “for whom service to the Fatherland
is a calling.”
Otherwise,
there will be a disaster ahead.
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