Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 20 -- The asymmetric
federalism the Soviets established and that Boris Yeltsin continued has mean
that “Russian” was “de facto attached to “the imperial system,” and “this
logically led in the Putin era to the appearance of the expansionist doctrine
of ‘the Russian world,’” Vadim Shtepa says.
Almost 30 years ago, the editor of the
Tallinn-based Region.Expert portal says, Sergey Shakhray and Viktor
Ilushin convinced Yeltsin that if predominantly ethnic Russian regions became
republics, the entire country would fall apart; and as a result the first
Russian president crushed all attempts in that direction (region.expert/opposition/).
But in doing so, they not only made it
impossible for Russian oblasts and krays to develop as full-fledged regions but
helped ensure that the Kremlin would become increasingly anti-non-Russian in
its actions as it advances its Russian world idea and that the Russian
opposition would fail to understand why federalism is critical to Russia’s
future.
An example of this continuing failure of
the Russian opposition, Shtepa suggests, is found in a new programmatic
discussion of federalization on the Kasparov portal (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5EE33317EB0B8,
discussed in part at windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2020/06/moscow-has-thrown-regions-to-their.html).
Besides the somewhat strange analogies the
Kasparov authors draw between 1991 and the pandemic now, they show a
fundamental lack of understanding of the history of federalism in the Russian
Federation, a lack of understanding that reflects the fact that most of those
in the opposition are Muscovites rather than from beyond the ring road.
Beginning in July 1990, all the republics
of the RSFSR except Daghestan and Mordvinia adopted sovereignty declarations
and inserted them in their republic constitutions. They expected that this
would allow them to participate in an equal basis in the future Commonwealth of
Independent States.
But when it became obvious that the CIS
was meaningless because the union republics didn’t want to form a federation or
confederation with Moscow, the Russian Federation truly faced the prospect of
disintegration along ethnic lines. Yeltsin responded by rejected republic
status for the oblasts and krays and moving to gut the powers of the autonomous
republics.
To that end, he pushed the Federative
Treaty of 1992, a document which has very little to do with federalism as
commonly understood. It was not an
accord among the regions, but rather “between the regions and the center,” with
“the interests of the center from the beginning primary and sufficient onto
themselves.”
That made Russian “federalism” “absolutely
dependent on Kremlin leaders; and it is not surprising that to this day, it has
remained only on paper,” the regionalist writer says.
The Kasparov writers also get other things
wrong as well: The Federation Council was created in 1993 not in 1995. In the
latter year, it only changed the way it was formed, with governors and heads of
regional assemblies replacing senators elected directly by the population.
Because most of the former were elected then, for a short time, it was a
federation institution.
But in 2001, Vladimir Putin destroyed it
and transformed in into “a dead institution, a sinecure for federal nomenklaturchiki,
one in which many ‘senators’ in fact do not have any relations at all to the regions
which they ‘represent.’”
“All these transformations did not require
any ‘amendments’ to the Constitution” as “in the 1993 Constitution, there is no
reference to republic sovereignty or treaty relations.” Similarly, “the current
‘amendments’ in essence do not contradict that Constituiton but are only the
next step on the path of centralization and unitarization.”
Unfortunately, Shtepa says, “the Russian
opposition often shows just as centralist way of thinking as the powers that
be.” Its members, almost all of whom are Muscovites or from Moscow, believe
that the only thing needed to change Russia is the appearance of “’a good tsar’”
in place of the current bad one.
When the direction of Russian development
turns away from centralization to genuine federalism, he suggests, it will be
necessary for the regions, all of which will have a status equal to republics,
to agree on a new political capital, much as other countries have done, and ensure
that economic and political power won’t be concentrated in the same place.
“Moscow is a concentrate of imperial meanings
and symbols from the medieval ‘Third Rome’ to the Soviet stars over the Kremlin,”
Shtepa says; but most opposition leaders don’t see this because for them as for
the people inside the Kremlin, Moscow rather than Russia is the focus of their
attention.
No comments:
Post a Comment