Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 25 – Andrey Makarychev,
a Russian specialist on international affairs now teaching at the University of
Tartu in Estonia, says that one of the major problems for Russia is that the
Kremlin views the border regions of the country “as a source of invented
threats” to its rule “rather than as a resource for development.”
He tells the Karelian portal Mustoi.ru
today that such a perspective limits Russia’s ability to modernize but limiting
modernization is exactly what the Kremlin wants. As Vladimir Putin says,
“Russia will not exchange sovereignty even for a higher quality of life” (mustoi.ru/prigranichnost-dlya-kremlya-istochnik-vydumannyx-ugroz-a-ne-resurs-razvitiya/).
What the Russian leadership does not
understand, Makarychev continues, is that “borders are not going away but
changing. Gradually and painfully borders of national jurisdictions are
withering away. But other borders connected with identity, ethnicity, religion
and economics are reforming.”
“Some of the Russian regions are
trying to find in this new world flexible and soft borders,” the Tartu scholar
says, as when for example “at a symbolic level when they associate themselves
with Finno-Ugric, Islamic or Turkic worlds.”
Russia can only benefit from this, but the Kremlin is afraid of that
trend.
Despite that, Makarychev says, the
study of borders in Russia and neighboring countries has intensified “especially
after Crimea and ‘Novorossiya.’ For Estonia, both these tragic developments are
viewed as important warnings of concern not only for Ukraine but for all of
Europe.”
But if research is up, progress in
promoting transborder arrangements between Russia and its neighbors has slowed
or even reversed, he suggests. There is no discussion any more about
Kaliningrad, little effort on the Russian side about promoting Narva-Ivangorod cooperation,
and Estonia’s relations with Pskov oblast are extremely problematic.
Moscow’s shift in focus to the Far
East and Asia, Makarychev continues, is unlikelyto give anything “geopolitically
or economically” to the country. And whether the current powers that be in
Russia admit it or not, “Europe, including its northern segment, constantly
will be one of the key regions for Russia.”
The problem there, he says, is that “Moscow
views the neighboring Nordic countries through the prism of military strategy
without understanding that, for example, debates about the potential membership
in NATO of Finland and Sweden have been provoked by Russia’s policies toward
Ukraine.”
“Under those conditions, there is
hardly likely to be progress.” That applies to Karelia as well, a region special
less geopolitically than geo-culturally.
But that remains a figure of speech given that Karelia is not able to
achieve raise its status via either of the two ways others have – Chechnya by
the threat of force and Tatarstan by its resources (both economic and
ethno-cultural).
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