Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 1 – At first glance, the attack on the FSB building in Arkhangelsk
appears to be but one of a series of similar terrorist acts in the Russian
Federation, Natalya Gulevskaya says; but a closer examination of the personality
of the criminal, his motives, and his modus operandi show that it is something
far more serious.
Indeed,
the Russian commentator suggests, it is “a black swan” event of the kind that suggests
the Putin regime has no passed “the point of no return” because the powers that
be have created a situation which has “given birth to the first terrorist
attack with political motives against the anti-constitutional actions of the
authorities” (opentown.org/news/207242/).
Russia has a rich history of
revolutionaries and political terrorists, Gulevskaya points out; but “never
before has there been a political terrorist act carried out not in the struggle
for power or against the anachronistic norms of the Basic law of the state but
against the actions of officials who have violated the rights and freedoms
of the individual.”
“This is a very concerning sign both
for the ruling powers that be and for the entire population,” she says. “The
Putin regime has not been able to create an ideology which could justify not
only the seizure and usurpation of power but also the appropriation of the
financial potential of the state.”
Thus, this action marks “the beginning
of the end of the construction of the Chekist state and already in the near
future we can expect a conceptual shake up or the latest wave of the collapse
of the empire.”
Three other commentators also suggest
that the Arkhangelsk bombing involves more than meets the eye. Israeli analyst Avraam Shmulyevich on the
After Empire portal says that it represents the shift from “Muslim terrorism to
“Russian political terrorism” and from attacks on civilians to attacks on the
state (afterempire.info/2018/11/01/arh-terror/).
The Arkhangelsk bombing, he observes,
has its predecessors: “the Primorsky partisans, the blowing up of monuments,
the burning of official buildings of the FSB and United Russia,and the periodic shooting of policemen.” Now, clearly,
it is the turn of “the Russian North, ‘which never knew serfdom.’”
Shmulyevich says it is especially noteworthy
that “the terrorist did not put forward any specific demands. That makes this action
typical political terrorism or even a civil war, no longer just terrorism but a
war with the system as such.”
Igor Eidman, a sociologist who works
as a commentator for Deutsche Welle, suggests that what happened in Arkhangelsk
is the rebirth of the Narodnaya volya or SR movements of the late 19th
and early 20th centuries. All
the conditions are in place for this both in society and the state, for new
revolutionaries and for new secret police spies like Azef (facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=2095465547183080&id=100001589654713).
And commentator Mikhail Pozharsky
says that the Putin regime has brought this on itself. “If you ban legal politics and persecute
people for peaceful action, this will lead to radicalism. If you create ‘terrorists’
out of innocent people with the help of torture, then sooner or later it will
come into someone’s head to carry out a real terrorist act” (blog.newsru.com/article/31oct2018/arhfsb).
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