Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 28 – Just as the
Prague Spring changed Eastern Europe forever
despite Brezhnev’s efforts to restore the status quo ante with Soviet
military force, so too the Belarusian people who have taken to the streets in
their country have changed the situation there beyond the ability of Lukashenka
or Putin to restore what was the case before August 9, Sergey Shelin says.
“A Belarusian political nation has
been born and declared itself,” the Rosbalt commentator says. “This means there
will appear a Belarusian nation state. Perhaps not now. Perhaps only after
attempts to ‘correct’ the mistake of Lenin or someone else” are made and fail (rosbalt.ru/blogs/2020/08/28/1860915.html).
Putin
operates under the illusion that he is “making history,” but doesn’t understand
that history is moving along its own course.
He and others like him can destroy the life of many, “but they cannot
undo the inevitable. They can only delay it.” That has been the basic story
line of the last 30 years.
Many
Russians mistakenly believe that Boris Yeltsin supported this direction of
history and that only Vladimir Putin has sought to reverse it. But in fact,
Yeltsin worked to limit the formation of nation states. He had relatively
little success in most places, and Putin has not had much more despite the
imagery he has projected.
Putin’s
much-ballyhooed support for ethnic Russians has not been all that consistent
but it has been ineffective. He talks about it in Estonia and Latvia, but
Russians there increasingly are identifying with their countries of residence
and even taking citizenship and assimilating to the nations there.
At
the same time, Putin has done little to oppose the pressure on ethnic Russians
in Central Asia and the Caucasus. “Both the ‘soft’ Yeltsin and the ‘tough’
Putin simply have sacrificed htem to the interests of military, commercial and
simply comradely relations with local rulers.”
“In
Kazakhstan, the share of ethnic Russians in the population has fallen from 40
percent to less than 20 percent. All Russian speakers left Turkmenistan already
under the previous deified dictator.” And even in “independent Abkhazia,” the fraction
of ethnic Russians is smaller than it was in Soviet times.
According
to Shelin, “the formation and strengthening of the new states has occurred over
these 30 years almost without a glitch. Each of them sooner or later has
adopted a regime it wants regardless of Moscow’s preferences. Russian attempts
to block this have led to bloodletting and dramatic divorces, but they haven’t
turned history back.”
A
divorce with Georgia was completed with the invasion of 2008; that with Ukraine
in turn was finalized with the annexation of Crimea and the destabilization of
the Donbass in 2014. Moscow has tried to
act with greater sophistication some places such as in Armenia, but it still
doesn’t accept that it is on the losing side of history.
Now
it is the turn of Belarus. At present, there “remain only two countries,”
Belarus and Kazakhstan, where Moscow retains the illusion that it can keep them
in Russia’s orbit forever. But with each
passing year and each new revolution, the gap between this illusion and reality
has become ever greater, however much Putin tries to suggest otherwise.
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