Paul Goble
Staunton, July 10 – Eight of the ten
republics and regions in the Russian Federation that Ukrainian scholars have
examined are capable of rapidly transforming themselves into independent countries
once the imperial center in Moscow collapses, according to a new report on the
prospects for their independence discussed at the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy.
Valery Pekar, head of the Decolonization
organization and one of the authors of the report, observed that Moscow “constantly
uses arguments about the economic, humanitarian, political and other
shortcomings of its own regions to justify its colonial policies” (abn.org.ua/en/analysis/arguments-for-decolonization-of-russia/).
But notes
that UN Resolution 1514 of December 1960 explicitly states that “insufficient
economic or political readiness cannot be used as a reason to postpone
independence” and urges that everyone look beyond Moscow’s arguments regarding
how “prepared” Russia’s regions and republics are to stand on their own.
According
to another author of the republic, Ukrainian economist Andriy Dligach, the
widely reported insolvency of Russia’s regions is Not a natural fact but a
constructed reality” because “a region can receive more from the center than it
earns” not because it is poor but because of the disproportionate “rents” Moscow
extracts.
The Ukrainian scholars selected ten
regions for the first “wave” of this study: Ingria, Kuban,
Oirat-Kalmykia, Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, the Urals, Komi, Siberia,
Sakha-Yakutia, and Buryatia, a deliberately “diverse” group of rich and poor,
northern and southern, large and small, non-Russian and ethnic Russian, and
with high and low protest activity.
The
Ukrainian team examined each of these in terms of “three indices of regional
well-being: economic, humanitarian and political” and concluded that all ten
could exist independently once Moscow disappears as the imperial center and
that “at least eight … are capable of quickly transitioning to independence.
According to the Ukrainian
investigators, Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, Buryatia, and the Sakha Republic
(Yakutia) have “the highest political capacity” to move quickly to independence. But others can follow because the money and
fear that Moscow has used to hold things together are both quicky running out.
But the report doesn’t idealize the
future. According to Pekar, “some states
will embark on the path to democracy. Others will become democratic republics.
Still others may turn into dictatorships.” After all, that has been the experience
of Ukraine and other non-Russians who escaped Russian rule in 1991. Others who
do now will be the same.