Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 26 – An incident yesterday
in a Russian military unit in the Transbaikal during which a Tatar soldier shot
and killed two officers, two other professional soldiers, and four draftees has
attracted widespread attention and concern because it shows that a problem thought
by many to have been overcome hasn’t been and in fact is now turning deadly.
Russian commanders first suggested that the
solder involved had suffered a nervous breakdown, but their statements were soon
disavowed, with ever more sources focusing on dedovshchina, the
mistreatment of more junior soldiers by more senior ones and officers, as
the cause.
Many Russians had come to believe that
this plague was a thing of the past given that Moscow has shortened the length of
time draftees serve thus reducing the differences between more senior and more
junior soldiers, increased the number of professional soldiers, and instituted
better mechanisms to monitor and prevent “non-standard” behavior.
But yesterday’s events show that the
problem has nt been solved, that thmaose who are mistreated are now more ready
to use lethal violence against their oppressors, and that at least in this case
a soldier is prepared to shoot not just his fellow soldiers but also officers,
crossing a line that many had thought impassable.
Investigations are ongoing, but already three
things are clear.
·
First, mistreatment of soldiers even in elite units of
the kind where this incident occurred is commonplace, especially in the
Transbaikal where former officers say the Russian army dumps some of its more
problematic officers (ura.news/news/1052404808).
·
Second, because the shooter-victim
was a Tatar and most of his victims were ethnic Russians, Kommersant has
suggested that “one of the possible motives of the murders was discrimination
on an ethnic basis” (kommersant.ru/doc/4140503). That is worrisome because the military for demographic
reasons is becoming ever more non-Russian.
·
And third, unlike in the past where dedovshchina
cases involved fisticuffs or further abuse, at least one of its victims has
shown himself willing to use lethal force, again something that makes it more
likely that others will follow, something that will create a new climate of
fear in many units.
Thus, it should
come as no surprise that a Moscow commentator says that the Russian authorities
must focus in on this case lest what he hopes is “atypical” become something else
(vz.ru/incidents/2019/10/25/316103.html).
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