Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 22 – Arguing that “there
is no truer path to the collapse of a system than the hyper-centralization of
authority,” Moscow blogger Elena Galkina says that the Kremlin has now taken a
step that shows its denizens think that “if they tighten the screws, it will be
possible to avoid the fate of the USSR.”
But in fact, they are repeating the
errors of the late Soviet period when that empire fell apart not because it
liberalized but because it liberalized and then tried to take it back first by
Mikhail Gorbachev’s own turn to the right that Eduard Shevardnadze warned of
and then by the ill-fated August 1991 coup.
Galkina says this is clear if one
looks beyond the discussions of moving the capital from Moscow and recognizes
that Sergey Kiriyenko, the first deputy chief of the Presidential Administration,
has not only stated that Moscow won’t extend the power-sharing agreement with
Tatarstan but made a more fateful declaration (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=599BC8EC5C63E).
The
Kremlin official says that “Russian statehood and the state are built not on
the basis of agreement.” Not only does that contradict Point Three of
Paragraph 11 of the Russian Constitution which specifies exactly the reverse
but also poses a challenge to regional leaders at precisely a time when Moscow
should not be alienating them further.
“The
economic losses of the regional elites of the Russian Federation as a result of
the insane adventures of the Kremlin in foreign affairs could be compensated by
decentralization,” Galkina says. “But the rejection of competitive
gubernatorial ‘elections,’ the strategic declaration of Kiriyenko, and much
else” shows the Kremlin is going in the opposite direction.
According
to Galkina, “it appears that in the Kremlin they think that if they respond to the
challenges of ‘the new 1980s’ by tightening the screws, that is to proceed
along a path opposed to that of Gorbachev, they will be able to avoid the fate
of the USSR.” They are simultaneously right and wrong.
They
are right that the situation they are setting up is unlikely to be resolved
peacefully, but they are wrong to think that the center won’t be challenged and
the country’s territorial integrity won’t be as well. After all, she says, “the
hatred of the regions for the center will be much stronger than it was in
perestroika” if Moscow continues in its current direction.
Galkina
ends with a plea: “It is time,” she says, “for the civilized world to work up
scenarios so that the toxic remnants of the last empire will not spread and
cover the continent.”
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