Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 28 -- Mikhail Shcheglov, a leading Russian nationalist
in the Republic of Tatarstan, says that non-Russian republics have become such “a
sacred cow” in public opinion across the country that even ethnic Russians who
dare to criticize them or seek their elimination are now often denounced as
Russophobes.
And that is true even among those who recognize
that ethnic-based asymmetric federalism led to the demise of the USSR and continues
to create problems for Russia, the head of the Society of Russian Culture of
the Republic of Tatarstan and a leader of the Russian Assembly (apn.ru/index.php?newsid=38294).
Lenin may have saved the empire by his
clever use of promises to non-Russians about the right of self-determination,
Shcheglov says; but the system he put in place has been a disaster, although
far too few Russians recognize that because some Russian elites are more than
ready to exploit the existence of non-Russian republics to promote their own
interests at the expense of the Russian nation.
According to the Russian nationalist, this
harmful pattern was fully documented by Aleksandr Salagayev in his 2012 book, Russian
Asymmetric Ethno-Federalism as a Source of Conflicts (in Russian, Moscow: ROC
at onflictmanagement.ru/rossiyskaya-assimetrichnaya-etnofederatsiya-kak-istochnik-protivorechiy-i-konfliktov/).
As a result of this, Shcheglov continues,
Russophobia
exists “not only
among
non-Russian
‘brothers’
in the country and among
its neighbors
but also
among
ethnic Russians themselves” who know that if they call for
doing
away with the republics, they “inevitably” will be called chauvinists even though
by staying silent they are sacrificing the interests and values of the
Russian nation.
When this will change, he laments, is
unclear. There was no
widespread push to do away with the non-Russian republics during the recent
discussion of constitutional change, and there seems to be sadly little
interest in taking what is no more than defending the Russian nation even among
Russians themselves.
The situation in Chechnya and Tyva shows
the direction things are moving: the elites are loyal to Moscow at least for show,
but the populations are increasingly hostile to Russians; and Russian elites who
cooperate with the Chechen and Tyvan elites have concluded they are better off
with such entities lest the demise f republics lead to the loss of rice bowls for
themselves.
“Many experts say,” Shcheglov continues, “that
this very ethnic asymmetry of the state system means that today’s Russia is becoming
a copy of the USSR on the eve of its disintegration.” And the pandemic may be
exacerbating this, with some predicting massive protests in the fall leading to
a similar outcome.
Shcheglov’s language is hyperbolic, but it
is noteworthy for three reasons. First, his
remarks call into question the assumption that Putin gains support among
Russians when he targets non-Russian republics for extinction. In fact, Russian
support fr such moves may be far less than the Kremlin or others assume.
Second, his words call attention to the
fact that many of the chief beneficiaries of the existence of non-Russian
republics are ethnic Russians who have learned to make use of them for their own
purposes and would oppose doing away with these structures regardless of the
ethnic issues that many have assumed are predominant.
And third, Shcheglov highlights the
reality that Russian elites and Russian masses are divided, a pattern that
makes the emergence of any truly powerful Russian nationalist movement problematic
if not impossible at least in the short term.
In fact, one can read this Russian nationalist’s article as a cry of
despair on that point.
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