Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 13 – Patriotism
for Stalin was an instrument for larger purposes, but now, when the Putin
regime has failed to specify any larger purposes, it may play an evil trick on
those who view it and Stalin as panaceas, undermining exactly what they hope
these things will solve, Dmitry Baunov says.
The Moscow Carnegie Center scholar
notes that Stalin is today the hero for almost all groups in Russian society
and argues that because of the uses to which he and his views are being put, it
is critically important to investigate his period to understand how his system
functioned and what problems its use now presents (regnum.ru/news/polit/2828040.html).
Such
an examination, Baunov suggests, shows that there are potentially serious
problems ahead.
A
volume published in 2011 contains information about a meeting Stalin had with
Georgian historians and party officials just two weeks after his famous toast
to the Russian people in May 1945, a toast in which he praised the Russian people
above all others and which many view as the basis for Russian nationalism to
this day.
But
at his meeting with the Georgians, Stalin appears almost as “a duplicitous
secret nationalist, the forefather of contemporary ‘Ukrainizers.’” In the Soviet leader’s words, “the Georgians
must find the most ancient roots which connect them with the great ethnoses of
the past” because “Georgia is a European country independent economically and
culturally.”
In
reality, Baunov argues, “the elevation of the Russian people (already from the
1930s) in front of one audience, and praise for the Georgians in another should
have discredited both positions.” That is because “patriotism here is only an instrument
tin the hands of something larger than the nation.” In Stalin’s case, that is
the USSR.
And
that in turn means that Stalin’s arguments were consistent. He was saying that
Georgia needs to attach itself to the Soviet Union “not as a nation but as an
effective system.” The Soviet leader wasn’t trying to present himself as both a
Russian nationalist and a Georgian one but as someone committed to a larger
goal.
At
least one Georgian historian, Nikolay Berdzenishvili, understood that. Stalin,
he said, “by nationality and not only by origin is a Georgian, by conviction,
he is a communist, and by his practical activity, he is a statesman as the
founder organizer of the Soviet state and the Soviet Union.”
Stalin
was thus committed not to the Russian nation or the Georgian nation but rather
to the creation of “the Soviet state apparatus of unprecedented power.
Nationalism sometimes was a useful weapon in the hands of this apparatus;” and
sometimes, an enemy that had to be fought. It was not an independent value to
be accepted or rejected as such.
That
is why despite his apparent playing with nationalism, Stalin “had to maintain the
ideological principle of class struggle” lest things get out of hand, a clear
indication of the importance of having a larger schema to fit nationalism into
but something that many now appear to have forgotten/
This
arrangement, Baunov continues, “corresponds to the stage of financial capitalism
according to Hilferding: major business combines with the state and begins to strengthen
‘the nation,’ but not as a goal in itself but as an instrument in a large economic
and political game. What is important is not the nation but capital and the
corporation.”
“In
the USSR, power belonged not to business but to the nomenklatura, not to the
owners but to the administrators.” And that gave the Stalinist and Soviet
system its particular characteristics, the Moscow analyst says.
But
today, the Soviet system is no more, and “the Soviet elite has been transformed
into capitalist masters. However in all this to the same degree, the Stalinist
system and ‘Soviet’ nationalism can be if not repeated then simulated: only
power will be held not by the nomenklatura but by the representatives of major
capital.”
And
in that event, “nationalism will serve not the overgrown apparatus of the CPSU
but the imperialist apparatus of ‘national’ business. As usually, a tragic history will be repeated
in the form of a farce.”
What
does this mean? It means, Baunov argues, that “the desire for ‘a strong power’
and ‘patriotism’ (in general connected with nationalism) will not solve any
problems.” Stalinism was about more than that because it grew out of a
revolution in which other values were proclaimed as primary.
“To
make ‘something similar’ but without a revolution out of today’s realities
means either to engage in a comedy or (in the best sense0 to build a banal
imperialist power, uniting ‘nationalisms’ not in the interests of the
dictatorship of the proletariat or nomenklatura but in the interests of big
business.”
Stalin
is thus not the model that many in Moscow now assume. He is far from the best guide
because for his followers today, “he embodies abstract mastery of power but
does not provide an explanation as to how it is to be achieved” or into whose
hands such an aggregation of power will fall.
And
it is those questions which will determine the future just as they have in the
past.
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