Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 24 – Vladimir Putin’s
treatment of the past including his Victory Day parade represents an attempt by
the Kremlin leader to fuse the Russian present with the Soviet past and thus
reverse not just the break with Soviet crimes but also the greatest consequence
of World War II for Russians, Aleksandr Tsipko says.
And that consequence was this, the
senior commentator says. “The path to victory was opened only when the Russian
peasant finding himself in the trenches separated in his consciousness the
motherland from Stalin and the Soviet system and began to fight not for the
preservation of the Soviet system but for the salvation of his fatherland and
the dignity of Russians” (ng.ru/ideas/2020-06-24/7_7893_victory.html).
By his actions and with today’s
parade, Tsipko says, Putin is seeking to reverse this development given that he
sees it as a threat to himself and his regime and to restore the identification
of Russians with their political system even though it no longer has the
ideological foundation that the earlier one had.
In a Nezavisimaya gazeta essay, he
says that there have been many suggestions as to why Putin has been so
insistent about going ahead with the parade despite the pandemic: Russians need
a boost after self-isolation, June 24th is the anniversary of when
Stalin marked the victory, or even to show “who is master in the country.”
But most likely, Tsipko continues,
Putin did so for “prosaic reasons.” Since Brezhnev’s times, those in power have
used parades to provide them with “the image of historical legitimacy” by
allowing the current occupant of the Kremlin to link himself with the military
victories of the state in the past.
Delaying the parade again clearly threatened the
view that “Putin is our all. Certainly, Putin takes into account that the
pandemic with each passing time is undermining the attitudes of mobilization and
militarism born in ‘Crimean spring’ of 2014; and with their fading, so too is
the basis of his regime.
Putin after all “became our all
precisely after we corrected ‘the historical mistakes of Khrushchev and Russia
was converted into a fortress surrounded on all sides by enemies.” In such a
situation, “the Victory Parade is much more important for people inside this besieged
fortress than for a free individual who calmly enjoys all the goods of
contemporary civilization.”
According to the commentator, Putin
thus decided he had to stage the parade because Russians and perhaps especially
the young are ever less motivated by the kind of militaristic patriotism he
wants to promote, a shift that all polls even those by agencies loyal to the
Kremlin show.
Putin has a particular reason to
stress things military. Stalin and Khrushchev could avoid such parades because “the
chief link in Soviet consciousness was the Leninist October and the triumphal
march of socialism across the planet. Today, however, what is important is not
only that the Victory of May 9 is the chief Russian victory but a military one
to boot.”
For Russia today, neither the present
nor the future provides a basis for optimism. Instead, Tsipko continues, “the
basis of optimism and faith in one’s own country can be provided only by the
undoubted victories of the past.” And that past is both increasingly Soviet and
increasingly militarist.
Moreover, “the heroization of all
things Soviet inevitably leads to the heroization of death,” the commentator
argues. The only content Victory Day now has is militarism and the defeat by
military means of an opponent. The costs
of that increasingly are ignored, and the Soviet and Stalinist denigration of
human life reaffirmed.
But that flies in the face of
humanity, Tsipko continues. “If the instinct of self-preservation did not live
in people, then nothing would remain of humanity.” And consequently, all the
current talk about how we “’can repeat’” this past is nothing by sado-masochism
writ large.
“What will we repeat?” Thirty to
forty million deaths? More blockades and starvation?
“Today’s patriots do not know that much must never be repeated for it was forever killed in the name of the great Victory.” No one should cast doubt on the decisive role of the Red Army in defeating Hitlerite Germany, but no one should forget much else besides.
“Today’s patriots do not know that much must never be repeated for it was forever killed in the name of the great Victory.” No one should cast doubt on the decisive role of the Red Army in defeating Hitlerite Germany, but no one should forget much else besides.
Unfortunately, “we have forgotten that
the path to Victory opened only after the war was transformed into a Fatherland
one. We have forgotten about the terrible human price of this victory. We have
forgotten that it did not bring freedom or wellbeing to the Soviet people. The
Stalinist GULAG continued to operate. Serf slavery for the collective farmers
became still more onerous than before the war. And the hunger of the end of the
1940s carried off more than 1.5 million lives.”
Gavriil Popov warned that all this
would happen, Tsipko says. That Russia’s
new leaders would want to copy Stalin and that in doing so, they would
rehabilitate him and his system to the harm of Russia’s possibilities. But that is not the only thing that is being
forgotten and being forgotten because those in power want it to be.
“Undoubtedly, the history of
socialist Russia is an inseparable part of Russian history. But the tragedy is that
having recognized the Soviet as Russian, we have begun to fear the truth about
the drama of war,” about the contempt of the country’s military men for the
losses of Russian soldiers, and about communism’s role in the rise of fascism.
Had Stalin not ordered German
communists to avoid any alliance with the social democrats, Hitler might never
have come to power. But that is only a
special case of a much larger issue Russians today unlike in Khrushchev’s times
won’t talk about let alone consider the implications of.
As Nicholas Berdyaev observed, “all
Western history between the two wars was defined by the fear of communism” and
its possible export to other countries. And
because of that, it is possible to say, as the great Russian thinker did, that “had
there not been Lenin,” there would not have been fascism which was a response
to what he created.\
“Here,” Tsipko says, “arises an
extremely serious question: what is better for the spiritual health of the Russian
nation – the beautiful truth about the Victory of May 9 or the truth about the
horrific human price of this undoubtedly great Russian victory? When answering
this question, one must recognize that patriotism inculcated by the glamor of
Victory gives little.”
The commentator concludes that the
current efforts of the Kremlin “to rehabilitate the crimes of the Soviet system”
are “insane.” “What do we want to say?
That we are a special people which puts no value on human life? That we can
with our own hands kill millions of our own compatriots?”
“Which is the truth that we do not
need?”
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