Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 3 – Russians today
foolishly think that their country is weaker than was the USSR and that it may
suffer the same fate, Aleksandr Khramchikhin says; but in fact, the reverse is
true. The Russian Federation is much stronger and more stable than its
predecessor, and only by recognizing that can Russians and their leaders move
forward.
In an essay for Novoye voyennoye obozreniye, the Russian nationalist commentator
says that it is long past time to dispel “the specter of the USSR” that hangs
over much of Russia and to realize that there are six major areas in which
Russia wins in comparison with the Soviet Union and others where “survivals of
the past” still need to be overcome (nvo.ng.ru/concepts/2017-11-03/1_972_ghost.html).
Khramchikhin lists
the following six advantages he says Russia already has over its predecessor:
·
“First,
Russia is much more ethnically and mentally unified and internally consolidated
than was the USSR.”
·
“Second,
the Russian market economy is much more effective than the Soviet command one …
despite a high share of state ownership, there is no price regulation or
Gosplan.”
·
“Third,
even under conditions of the current economic crisis, the standard of living of
the absolute majority of the population of Russia is qualitatively higher than
it was in the USSR.”
·
“Fourth,
even under the conditions of present-day political and ideological ‘freezing,’
the level of rights and freedoms of Russian citizens is much higher than even
in the last years of the USSR.”
·
“Fifth,
state propaganda has reached a qualitatively new level” and can compete on all
platforms, including the Internet in particular.
·
And
sixth, “in its foreign policy, the Russian Federation displays greater elements
of healthy pragmatism,” something that was often absent “not only in the USSR
but in the Russian Empire as well.” There are of course “survivals of the past”
in this regard but Moscow isn’t handing out money in the way that it did to
so-called “friends.”
Despite these successes, Khramchikhin
continues, everything could be lost quickly if the country does not maintain
its military forces. And that in turn means that it is “extremely necessary to
restore at least to the Soviet level science and education – the only sphere in
which the USSR really was better than present-day Russia.”
And in pursuing its goals in the world,
Moscow must also avoid shifting from the extreme of “senseless idealism” that
the Soviets displayed to “the other extreme of absolute cynicism.” (The
distance between the two approaches, the commentator says, is often all too
short.)
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