Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 13 – Many ethnic Russians who lived in Crimea before the Anschluss considered
themselves more Russian than even those in Moscow, voted for pro-Russian
parties and in 2014 welcomed the annexation by Russia. But in the years since, Andrey Vasilyev says,
they have come to see that Russia is not what they imagined and even to turn
against it.
So
far, the Region.Expert commentator says, this anger is mostly held in check;
but the experiences of this community has reduced their importance to Moscow as
an integrative force and led the Russian authorities to rely increasingly not
on those they thought would always be their allies but on “new Russians”
brought in from elsewhere (region.expert/replacement).
But the arrival of these outsiders
has only heightened the sense of Crimea’s longtime Russian residents that they
are different than the Russians of Russia and if anything decreased their desire
to be part of Vladimir Putin’s Russian world now or in the future. Indeed, they
could become allies of Ukrainians seeking the restoration of Ukrainian
sovereignty there.
Ever more Russians from Russia are
coming into Crimea, but ever more Russians in Crimea are getting Ukrainian
passports so they can leave, Vasiliyev says. The Russians coming in are getting
the better jobs, and the Russians who were there to begin with are seeing a
decline in their standard of living and status.
Not surprisingly, the latter aren’t happy.
Those coming in are at least
superficially more loyal to Moscow because they are dependent on Moscow subsidies,
but that also means that the burden Crimea imposes on the Russian taxpayers is
almost certain to grow, something that will make the Ukrainian peninsula even
more “a suitcase without handles,” as Russians often say.
That aspect of the situation has
been noted quite often in the Russian media, but Vasilyev points out that the
growing tensions between the old Russians and the new ones have not. Any mass
migration always changes the relationship between the old and the new, and that
unsettling development produces anger, first among the older residents and then
among the new.
To support his argument, the analyst
cites comments that have appeared in social media and says that even more blunt
assessments are being offered in private conversations among both groups. All
this suggests, he says, that “in a short time, these contradictions will become
an inalienable part of Crimean political discourse.”
And that means that Putin’s
annexation will leave the Russians of Crimea divided just as it has left
Russians elsewhere.
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