Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 16 – There are some things no one in Russia must say or even think.
Perhaps the most important of these is the idea that the Russian Federation
will disintegrate just as the Soviet Union and all other empires have. But the
Kremlin hasn’t managed to keep the idea out of the newspapers or to eliminate
it by taking it off line when it does appear.
Today,
Ukraine’s Gordon news agency reported
that “Moskovsky komsomolets had taken
down from its site an article about the inevitable disintegration of Russia.”
At 0324, the Moscow paper put up a story declaring that “A former Putin advisor
considers that the disintegration of Russia is inevitable.”
That
is an entirely “natural process” as far as “multi-national empires” are
concerned. The article was on the newspaper’s website for eight hours and
attracted more than 207,000 page-views. But then it was taken down (gordonua.com/blogs/illarionov/moskovskiy-komsomolec-udalil-s-sayta-statyu-o-neizbezhnom-raspade-rossii-509821.html).
By taking this
action, of course, the Moscow paper and its Kremlin bosses have only called
more attention to the article than it might have otherwise received; and it has
certainly not eliminated the article from the Internet because on the web
almost nothing ever goes away completely.
Below is the text of the article
which remains online at irnet.ru/2018/11/16/byvshiy-sovetnik-putina-schitaet-chto-raspad-rossii-neizbezhen.html:
Former
Putin Advisor Considers the Disintegration of Russia Inevitable
In the
opinion of the former advisor of the President of the Russian Federation
(2000-2005) Andrey Illarionov who at present is on an employee of the Cato
Institute (US), Russia will not be able to avoid the tragic processes which are
natural for all multi-national empires.
The
beginning stage of the disintegration of the empire, Illarionov considers,
could be observed at the beginning of the 20th century, in
1917-1918. “Then a partial reconquest and reoccupation of some territories
occurred. Another sage in this imperial disintegration took place at the start
of the 1990s. Then again was carried out a partial reconquest,” Glavred quotes
him as saying.
The
third stage is certain; it will be accompanied by the separation of certain
non-Russian ethnic territories from the present-day Russian Federation, the
economist and political figure notes. “Such processes are usually accompanied by
tragedies and blood. However, it is impossible to stop such tectonic forces of
universal history.”
In
Illarionov’s opinion, the disintegration of Russia will reduce military pressure
on Ukraine depending on who will be sitting in the Kremlin. If the leader of
Russia will be a responsible figure, then it is not impossible that democratic
Ukraine will help Russia navigate this process in a way that will be less
horrific for Russia itself as well as for the newly formed states.
No comments:
Post a Comment