Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 7 – All too often
since the Crimean Anschluss of 2014, Moscow has used its powers in the occupied
Ukrainian peninsula to test out and develop repressive measures that it has
then extended to the Russian Federation. Among the most notorious of these, of
course, is the use of psychiatric incarceration against dissidents.
That has attracted attention, but it
is far from the only area in which this is the case. According to Michael Talanov, a member of the Free Russia
Forum who lives in San Francisco, Moscow has completely isolated Crimea in
cyberspace, an obvious test and indication of its broader plans (ru.krymr.com/a/michael-talanov-anneksiya-kryma-privela-k-cifrovoi-izolyacii-poluostrova/30425021.html).
Talanov tells US-based Russian
journalist Kseniya Kirillova that Moscow has gone much further in restricting
Internet access in Crimea than elsewhere, effectively cutting off residents from
the information and business possibilities that the world wide web offers those
who are able to make use of it.
The details he provides about Crimea
and about the Russian Federation more generally are intriguing, but the most
important aspect of his interview is to serve as a reminder that Moscow is not
only behaving much worse toward the population of occupied Crimea than it is
toward that of the Russian Federation but is also using Crimea to test its
repressive measures.
All too many people have forgotten
Crimea altogether. The illegal occupation continues. But they should be
concerned about it not only because Crimea is Ukrainian but because an occupied
Crimea is where Vladimir Putin has been working on the techniques that he is
planning to impose elsewhere.
That reality should be enough to
convince those now indifferent to the situation in Crimea that it is important
not only in its own right and in terms of Ukraine but also significant because
of its impact in this way on the Russian Federation, the rights of its citizens,
and that country’s relations with the rest of the world.
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