Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 21 – There is only
one thing more unpleasant to the ears of many Russians than the suggestion that
their country may fall apart. That is to hear others suggest that when it does,
they stand ready to reclaim what is rightfully theirs. And Russians are
especially angry and alarmed when the author of such suggestions is Chinese or
Polish.
Now, a Beijing publication, Sohu,
has done just that, saying that Russia faces some of the same problems the USSR
did in 1991, will therefor disintegration, and that this time around its
neighbors, including China, need to be ready to seize the parts that used to
belong to them (sohu.com/a/380089804_100062027; in Russian at inosmi.ru/inoblog/20200321/247095332.html).
The Chinese article compounded its
offense by resting its arguments on a lecture a Polish legal specialist recently
gave in which he suggested that by 2025, Russia would again fall apart – or alternatively
grow into a new and threatening Soviet Union. If the former, then its neighbors
need to be ready to take back their own.
Casimir Fritskevich, the Chinese
outlet said, predicted that Russia would fall into dozens of “petty states,” some
of which might work out a new modus vivendi of cooperation but others would
fall under the influence or even complete control of neighbors, something that
will trigger new geopolitical conflicts much like those in the Middle East
today.
Sohu suggested that much of
the Polish lawyer’s argument seemed based more on emotions than on reality, but
at the same time, it continued, “Russia today really is somewhat similar to the
ancient empires in the history of China.” And the Chinese outlet concludes that
it faces disintegration just as the USSR did.
The reasons for that, Sohu says,
are the following: out-of-date thinking among the leaders, a powerful but inefficient
bureaucracy, economic problems and “too strong” a commitment to being a
hegemonic state. “For many Russians, getting out from under the central government
would be profitable.”
China, Europe and the US do not want
Russia to grow strong but neither do they want to see it disintegrate, the
article continues, an attitude that resembles that in their capitals 35 years
ago. But Russia has no chance to recover as an industrial power, Sohu
says; and “from that point of view, the future disintegration of Russia seems
inevitable.”
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