Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 5 – Moscow must
demand the establishment of autonomous regions for ethnic Russians in all the
post-Soviet states, Russian nationalist commentator Grigory Mironov says; and the
non-Russian countries should support this because it will reduce the impulse of
the Russian state to seek to re-absorb one or another of them.
In a commentary for the Novaya
Rossiya information agency, Mironov says that Russians are among the most
divided nations in the world and should act as other countries do and demand
that the places where their co-ethnics form compact majorities should be given
formal state autonomy (novorosinform.org/opinions/2499).
“The largest Russian territory” beyond
the borders of the country, he says, is Northern Kazakhstan (Southern Siberia).”
But there are also Russians in Ukraine, the northeastern sector of Estonia,
Latgalia in the east of Latvia, the Mugan oblast in Azerbaijan, and the northern
portions of Kyrgyzstan.” There are even
Russians further afield in Israel or Transcarpathian Rus.
And despite everything that has
happened since 1991, ethnic Russians “still form a majority in almost all these
regions.”
According to Mironov, “the creation
of ethnic Russian national subjects would secure many of these countries from
possible destabilization in the future. Ukraine may not want to make concessions
and federalize” fearing that “having lost Crimea and the Donbass, it will lose
more in the future.”
The same thing is true in Kazakhstan
and Belarus, the commentator says. And
saving the Russian communities in these countries is essential to increasing
the size of the Russian world.
“It is a mistake to think that if for
example in Kazakhstan, Estonia or what remains of Ukraine that giving Russians
national districts would mean that these regions would automatically separate a
automatically separate these and join Russia.” In fact, he insists, just the
reverse is the case.
“Having received the desired
national formations, the Russian population will be calmed, will acquire all
national rights and will live for the good of these states.” That is especially
important for the countries of Central Asia, he says, because there the
presence of Russians prevents the rise of “a conflict of all against all.”
Pushing for such things, Mironov
says, is not only a matter of simple justice for the Russian people but also a
characteristic of any great country that will not want to let its compatriots
be tossed to the winds. “Little Hungary
is doing this,” the commentator concludes. “What about us?”
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