Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 25 – Many
Ukrainians comfort themselves with the observation that Vladimir Putin can’t
live forever and that after him relations between Russia and Ukraine will
improve, Iosif Zisels says; but in fact, the leaders who will emerge after
Putin leaves the scene may treat Russia even worse than he does.
The former Soviet dissident and
current head of the Association of Jewish Public Organizations and Communities
of Ukraine tells Yekaterina Shumilo of the Apostrophe
that this reflects the imperial nature of Russian identity (apostrophe.ua/article/society/2018-11-25/ukraine-ne-nujno-mechtat-ob-uhode-putina-mojet-stat-esche-huje---sovetskiy-dissident/21964).
Ukrainians do not fully
recognize that, Zisels says, and along with a past in which Ukrainians views
Russians as “’elder brothers’” but have now broken with them, it explains why
Ukrainians still have significantly more positive attitudes about Russians than
Russians do about Ukrainians.
“It isn’t Putin who is waging war
against us; rather it is the Russians who are,” Zisels says. And it is
critically important that Ukrainians and others understand that. Putin didn’t “make this Russia;” in a real
sense, this Russia made someone like him the kind of leader it would turn to.
Moreover, the Jewish activist says, Putin
“isn’t the very worst variant. After Putin could come someone still worse; and
thus one should not dream about his departure, although he has inflicted many
misfortunes on us. For Russia, we
Ukrainians are not a nation or a country, but something other and undefined. We
were part of them and suddenly we decided to break out.”
Because of that, their attitudes toward
us are worse than ours are to them, Zisels says. “To raise one’s hand and kill
an elder brother is impossible: there are psychological barriers which because
of family training are very high. But when the war in the Donbass began, they
were overcome.”
The situation now is one in which “the
younger brother is becoming stronger and does not want to much up any more with
injustice on the part of the elder brother.” The latter is still strong enough
to resist, but he “cannot win” in the end – and he perhaps feels this although
he cannot acknowledge that fact.
Among those in Putin’s entourage who
are “much worse than Putin,” Zisels says, are Rogizn and Ivanov. “I am a
dissident,” and that is how he looks on things in Moscow. That is why, he says, he won’t offer an
optimistic scenario, but rather a pessimistic one and then help means of
minimizing its consequences and maximizing Ukraine’s chances.
Asked whether Russians “always want
to have an emperor like Putin,” the Jewish leader says: “Never say ‘never,’ and
never say ‘always. Russia in its current border cannot be a different country
and cannot have a different identity. Only a force, an external force can stop
it without engaging in a military conflict.”
That is what happened in the 1980s,
when the West without military conflict was able to “defeat the Soviet Union in
the Cold War. And now the same thing is possible. We cannot impose our identity
on them: their identity will resist … We must leave them in peace and allow
evolution to work.”
According to Zisels, “practically
everything can be changed in an evolutionary manner. Artificially we cannot
replace the psychology of Russians: there are 150 million of them, a majority
of which have a different identity” than others do.
“Many dream about the disintegration
of Russia, but I look on that prospect with dread,” he continues. “I understand
that Crimea may be returned when Russia begins to fall apart and that the
Donbass perhaps can be returned even earlier.” But Ukrainians should reflect as
to what a group of states on its eastern border, many with nuclear weapons,
might mean.
“What could we do with such a
situation? Fight with all of them? Are we ready for this?” A smaller state can
arm itself and become more powerful than its larger neighbors: Israel is a good
example of that. But are Ukrainians prepared to make the kind of sacrifices
that will require? The answer is far from clear.
Asked in conclusion about how long
empires can exist in the present-day world, Zisels says that there are two
competing trends, one toward amalgamation and the other towards
decentralization. In some places, the
one will dominate and in others, the other. “For me, balance is importance.
Neither tendency must win.”
If the first were to win out, we
would have a world empire; if the second, “a chaotic world.” At present, there
are some 200 countries. A few of them are fighting one another; but most have
found a way to live in peace and even cooperate, Zisels concludes.
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