Paul Goble
Staunton,
Oct. 16 – Many assume that the Baikal-Amur Mainline railway super project was a
Brezhnev era effort begun in 1974, but in fact, construction of the BAM, as the
railway is commonly known, began not then but in the early 1930s and was scheduled
to be completed by November 7, 1936.
Now
that Moscow is again talking about expanding BAM by enlarging tunnels and
making it a double-track rather than single-track road, Kommersant journalist
Yevgeny Zhirnov has examined the history of this project and concludes that the
main obstacles are not “severe weather conditions and the lack of a labor
force” but in Moscow (kommersant.ru/doc/5038170).
Again and again, from the 1930s on, Moscow announced
grand plans and then engaged in bureaucratic infighting that precluded their
achievement. As a result of these problems, Zhirnov shows, the east and west
branches of BAM were connected only in 1984 and the most important tunnel,
itself only single-tracked, was completed only in 2001.
Something similar appears to be going on now, and that
provides little reason for optimism. The obvious problems of climate and labor
availability seem so overwhelming that few look beyond them to the bureaucratic
difficulties in the Soviet and now Russian capital. But it is there that BAM
has been blocked so often in the past.
Zhirnov’s article provides compelling evidence that a
similar pattern holds again now, with big talk in the capital about
transformative development and far less progress actually achieved on the
ground in the Trans-Baikal.
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