Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 29 – The past
year has been one in which “all the trends which arose in earlier years
continued,” and therefore we are entitled to conclude that “the main result of
2019 in Russia was the absence of any results” even as the system continues to
degrade economically, socially and politically, Anatoly Nesmiyan says.
That combination makes the future
development of events obvious in that with ever fewer resources, there will be ever
greater struggles over them and the results will be ever more negative for
most, with the likelihood of an explosion on the part of the rest ever more likely (t.me/nesmijan/2254 reposted at rusmonitor.com/anatolij-nesmiyan-glavnym-itogom-2019-goda-v-rossii-yavlyaetsya-otsutstvie-lyubyh-itogov.html).
“In this sense,” the Moscow
commentator says, “2019 became a continuation of the previous years, one
without the slightest attempt at resolving the underlying problem. We enter the
last year of the second decade with the very same contradictions of a year ago
but at a lower level. This apparently is too be called ‘stability.’”
This situation may continue for a
time in an inertial way, but with ever fewer resources, it cannot continue forever.
At some point, there will be unanswerable demands for fundamental change,
leading to a revolutionary situation because those in power have proved
themselves incapable of action and incapable of responding to the demands of
the people.
And this scenario which will occur
even if the regime tries to continue everything as it now is will lead to the
rise of “one single question: the question of the future of the enormous territory”
now within the borders of the Russian Federation.
“Will it remain united (then the
struggle will be conducted on the basis of the principles of the organization of
administration in it – centralized, federal or confederal) or will the disintegration
of the country take place and then have to be established principally new
relations with the surrounding space” and concerned outside powers.
It is difficult to say whether this
will be the outcome of 2020, Nesmiyan continues. “By all signs, very little time remains;
[and] the powers that be understand this.”
That is reflected in their increasing tendency to focus only on the shortest
of short-term issues – nothing beyond 2024 – and ignore deeper and
longer-lasting problems and trends.
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