Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 23 – Given his own
willingness to use violence against people in Kazakhstan, Georgia, Lithuania,
Latvia and elsewhere, no one should be surprised that the first and last Soviet
president Mikhail Gorbachev says he supports Vladimir Putin’s annexation of
Crimea and, in his place, would have done the same, according to Andrey Malgin.
But Gorbachev’s remarks which
appeared in an interview with London’s “Sunday Times” call attention to his own
willingness to use lethal force and “worker detachments” which all too often
are forgotten, the Italy-based commentator suggests; and he would have been
better served by saying nothing (nr2.com.ua/publications/U-Gorbacheva-ruki-po-lokot-v-krovi-publicist-Andrey-Malgin-119895.html).
Gorbachev’s reign began, Malgin
points out, with his use of force, including “worker detachments” of the kind
Putin has relied and also consisting of “ethnic Russian hooligans,” to suppress
protests by young people in Alma-Ata and Karaganda against the CPSU general
secretary’s imposition of an ethnic Russian in place of an ethnic Kazakh as
that republic’s leader.
There were deaths, and two years
later, in another Kazakhstan city, Novy Uzen, Gorbachev sent in the special
forces to suppress another demonstration by young people. And again there were
victims.
Less than a year after that, Malgin
continues, when the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh petitioned Gorbachev to grant
them independence from Azerbaijan, he sent into that republic another group of
Soviet internal troops, where they “stood shoulder to shoulder” with the Azerbaijanis,
he says.
Then in April 1989, Gorbachev sent
troops into Tbilisi to suppress Georgian demonstrations, and these troops used
a new weapon to do their work. In addition to gas, they dispatched many of the
protesters with entrenching tools. Sixteen Georgians died on the spot, and 250
more were hospitalized.
And in early 1991, Gorbachev ordered
troops to fire on demonstrators in Vilnius and Riga in a failed attempt to
prevent those Baltic countries from pursuing independence. (Malgin doesn’t
mention it, but the Soviet leader wanted to do the same thing in Tallinn but
was blocked by the commander of the Tartu air base, Maj. Gen. Dzhokhar Dudayev,
who closed air traffic over that northern Baltic republic.)
Despite those who believe Gorbachev
wanted to destroy the USSR, the Russian commentator continues, the Soviet
president in fact was committed to using force in the name of preserving it,
although his use of force probably had the unintended consequence of
accelerating the demise of the empire.
The only thing that might surprise anyone is that Gorbachev delayed so long in making his declaration of support for Putin's Anschluss, but Malgin says there is a likely explanation for that: the former Soviet leader probably didn't want to offend his Western supporters but now has concluded that for him that isn't as important as not offending Putin.
The only thing that might surprise anyone is that Gorbachev delayed so long in making his declaration of support for Putin's Anschluss, but Malgin says there is a likely explanation for that: the former Soviet leader probably didn't want to offend his Western supporters but now has concluded that for him that isn't as important as not offending Putin.
In response to Gorbachev’s
statement, the Ukrainian foreign ministry has put him on a watch list of those
banned from entering Ukraine. More than that, Kyiv has asked that the European
Union impose the same restrictions on his travel to any member country and to
impose other sanctions on him.
Malgin says that if he were in
Putin’s place, he would have responded to any question about Crimea “with
humor.” After all he could point out that he was at Foros in Ukraine when the
August coup occurred and he could simply express his “gratitude” for the support
he received from the people on the peninsula.
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