Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 17 – Vladimir Putin views autocephaly for the Ukrainian Orthodox as having
an equally fateful and negative impact on Russia as the disintegration of the Soviet
Union, Andrey Illarionov says. The Kremlin leader will never forgive Kyiv for
this and will do all he can to block it.
During
a conversation with Ukraine’s Glavred news agency, the former Putin advisor and
current senior fellow at Washington’s Cato Institute says that the Kremlin is
truly alarmed about Ukrainian autocephaly (glavred.info/ukraine/10027652-putin-nakazhet-ukrainu-za-avtokefaliyu-eks-sovetnik-prezidenta-rf-sprognoziroval-budushchee-posle-tomosa.html).
Since 2014, he argues, Ukraine has
done nothing as important as its pursuit of autocephaly except for military
resistance. Gaining that independent status for the church shores up the
country’s political independence and weakens “the imperial position” of the
Moscow church, pointing to its eventual exit from Ukraine and ultimately from
Belarus as well.
According to Illarionov, “Putin
recognizes the seriousness of the situation in the religious sphere and thus is
already preparing for Ukraine a decisive response to the actions of the
Ukrainian Orthodox church.” That is
because the Kremlin leader knows that if he loses on this, he loses far more
than he can and still have his current agenda survive.
“By its importance,” the autocephaly
of the Ukrainian church “is comparable to the disintegrations of the Soviet
Union and the Russian Empire.” After both those events, “the political disintegration
of the empire began in the religious sphere. Putin understands this very well
and therefore doesn’t intend to surrender his positions.”
If the Kremlin leader can’t stop
autocephaly – and it certainly appears that that train has left the station,
Illarionov says – he will certainly seek “’to punish’ Ukraine for its
acquisition” out of his own self-regard and because such punishment will serve
as a warning to others not to try anything similar.
What Putin will try will depend,
however, not only on the mechanisms at his command but also on the reaction of
Ukraine, other post-Soviet states and the West where unfortunately many do yet not
understand that Moscow’s loss of an imperial church just like its earlier loss
of an imperial communist party prefigures much broader losses in other sectors
as well.
Consequently, Putin’s response
almost certainly will be far more negative than most in the West now imagine,
including the possibility of a major military move. In the mind of the Kremlin
ruler, that despite all the negative consequences it would entail may pose fewer negatives than doing nothing and watching his imperial dreams dissolve.
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