Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 24 – The analogies
people draw in their efforts to organize, understand and explain the facts
around them typically have more profound consequences than the facts
themselves. And as a result, they merit
the closest attention perhaps especially when they seem particularly
outrageous.
One such analogy has now been
offered by Sergey Goncharenko, an arbitrage judge, and Nurali Latypov, a neurobiologist,
in a long Nezavisimaya gazeta article concerning the disintegration of the
Soviet Union and especially the end of Russian and Ukrainian cohabitation in a
single state (ng.ru/ideas/2019-06-19/5_7601_ideas.html).
They say that the two hemispheres in
the human brain, which have made possible speech, have as a downside both schizophrenia,
“he price man pays for the increase in the power of his intellect” and also, in
the view of some researchers, epilepsy. The latter notion led doctors to
believe that that disease could be cured by severing the ties between the two
parts of the brain.
But that technique discredited
itself, Goncharenko and Latypov say, because of its side effects.
Unfortunately, they suggest, what was rejected as a medical procedure was in the
case of the former USSR adopted as a political strategy, the results of which,
they argue, have entailed the most unwelcome collateral damage.
What happened with the Soviet Union,
they continue, resembled “the barbaric surgical operation” that was applied to
epileptics in the 1940s. “The collective
brain of the USSR in fact consisted of two hemispheres, Ukrainian and Russian.”
Most of the Soviet elite was from one or the other, with much in common but
also much that was different and mutually supportive.
“By the end of the 1970s, the Soviet
Union began to get sick. The political system rapidly degraded, the economic and
social systems experienced not as stormy but also serious degradation.” Some
like Gaidar and Chubais thus “recommended to ‘the surgeon’ Boris Yeltsin” to cut
the link “between the Ukrainian and Russian hemispheres.”
At first, Goncharenko and Latypov say,
these “patients” didn’t display any “pathological” problems. “But in the end,
it happened that the right hand not only began to interfere with the left but the
left with the right … and knives appeared in both and began to slice at each
other” in deleterious and potentially fatal ways – just as happened with
epileptics.
“Why do we offer such a harsh analogy?”
the two ask. “Because this model unfortunately is entirely adequate. It already
has allowed to predict the course of many events and we hope that it will give some
guidance for curing this horrific self-inflicted wound,” one that divided the
two hemispheres that had kept Eurasia in balance.
For the two of them, June 12, 1991,
was a tragedy that “cut apart the consciousness of the Russian world,” a
tragedy that happened because Boris Yeltsin was not capable of thinking above
the level of an obkom secretary and thus was prepared to use not a scalpel to
cure the diseases the country suffered but instead an axe.
Few foreign leaders who aspired to
conquer Russia, but “what is more than surprising,” they suggest, “is that a
group of Russian people assured themselves and others that Russia could regain its
healthy by the amputation of a majority of its organs. According to their strange
notion, a Great Russia couldn’t be healthy but a cut down one could.
The collapse of the economies of the
parts was the most obvious immediate consequence, and one that should not have
surprised anyone who knows that larger units almost always do better economically
than do smaller ones. But that was hardly the most significant damage from this
dividing up of what they call “the hemispheres” of the Soviet brain.
It has led to the degradation of
politics and it has opened the way for Chinese expansion into the rest of
Eurasia. The US is terrified by China’s rise; but it should remember than in rejecting
the wise counsel of the first president Bush not to allow Ukraine and Russia to
divide that it now faces a problem that Washington itself helped create.
Reattaching the two hemispheres is not
going to be easy; it may not even be possible. But a recognition of the
profundity of the problem the demise of the USSR and of the impact the splitting
apart of “the two hemispheres” of the brain that guided it is a necessary precondition
for any move forward, Goncharenko and Latypov say..
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