Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 12 – Russians laugh
at any suggestion that the Ukrainian people came out to the Maidan to make
history and insist that they were driven there by American political
technologists, a reflection of the fundamental contrast between their country
and that of the Ukrainians, Russian political analyst Andrey Okara says.
That contrast – Ukraine has a weak
state but a strong society while Russia has a strong state but a weak society –
has another important consequence, he says. In Russia, war leads to dictatorship
and blocks reform, while in Ukraine, it can open the way to modernization (nv.ua/opinion/okara/v-chem-glavnoe-protivorechie-mezhdu-ukraincami-i-rossiyanami-43488.html).
“The legendary 85 percent of
Russians who support the current order in Russia are incapable of believing
that society can be the moving force of revolutionary events,” the result of
their projection of their own situation onto others which in fact are quite
different, the political analyst argues.
And they further believe, he
continues, that “no modernization is possible because during a war, there must
be a mobilization type of administration and a military dictatorship,” again a
conclusion suggested by their own national experience of state and society but
one that doesn’t extend to others like Ukraine.
In Ukraine, Okara says, “the will of
society is not an abstraction.” It is a reality with which everyone must
deal. And consequently a conflict which
in Russia may become “an obstacle for modernization” can and “should be
transformed into a catalyst and promoter of mobilization.”
Ukraine today, he argues, finds
itself in “a unique situation.” The state is weak and ineffective, but
Ukrainian society has shown itself “capable of solidarity and synergism and of
mutually supported action on the basis of mutual trust.”
And that means that the antimony
Russians assume exists between war and modernization does not necessarily exist
in Ukraine and that it won’t exist even though the current Ukrainian government
has gained significantly more power than its predecessor. Ukrainian society is still more powerful than
the state, and that is the basis for hope.
If Ukrainian society demands
modernization just as it demanded dignity and integration with Europe earlier,
then modernization will happen regardless of the nature of holdover Ukrainian
officials and all the difficulties that Ukrainian society and the Ukrainian
state now face and will face in the future.
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