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Russia -- The Empire of Tyranny
frontpagemag.com ^ | May 19, 2005 | Askar Askarov

Posted on 05/19/2005 2:38:11 PM PDT by lizol

Russia -- The Empire of Tyranny

By Askar Askarov FrontPageMagazine.com | May 19, 2005

President George W. Bush’s recent attendance in the festivities in Moscow marking the 60th anniversary of Nazi Germany’s defeat took place against the background of rising tensions between Washington and the Kremlin. The American leader’s decision to make historic first time visits to the former Soviet republics of Latvia and Georgia drew an odd response from the Russian foreign minister, who went as far as sending a letter of protest. However inappropriate, the protest did not transpire without reason. Mr. Sergey Lavrov understood well the symbolic importance of an American president’s visit to democratic Latvia and Georgia, the countries Russia still considers to be subjects of its so-called sphere of influence. The Americans’ message to Moscow, in essence, was that these territories were no longer the backyard Russia could abuse at will. Perhaps predictably, during his stay in Latvia, President Bush took the opportunity to remind his Russian counterpart that it is “in his country's interests that there be democracies on his borders.” Unstated yet clearly implied in this comment was the inference that Putin must attend to his democratic responsibilities, instead of nurturing still more autocratic aspirations for Russia's future.

There was a time when skeptics of Russia’s democratic potential liked to cite frequently the well-known dictum: “Scratch a Russian and you will find a Mongol.” The logic went that their Asiatic origins prevented Russians from embracing Western liberalism. Given the changes that have taken place in the Asian landscape in the past half-century, it is long due to correct this gross historical injustice against the Asians, and in particular, the Mongols. According to the latest annual report by the prestigious Freedom House, Mongolia is a “free” country, whereas Russia is still listed in the category of “not free” nations alongside Syria, North Korea and Cuba. So, left without this easy rationale which for centuries helped many Westerners to excuse Russia’s tyrannical penchant, how is one to explain what currently transpires in Russia?

Make no mistake, the Russia of Vladimir Putin is headed anywhere except toward a democratic future. If the latest actions and statements by the Russian president are any indication, his country will not join the ranks of democratic nations anytime soon. Ever since coming to power, Vladimir Putin has consistently tried and often succeeded in wiping out what seemed to be sprouting elements of democracy. Having crushed the independent media and insubordinate business class, Putin first consolidated political power by stuffing key government posts with his pals from the KGB. Then, in a startling move, the Russian president decreed the liquidation of the system that had allowed citizens to choose their own governors. In order to increase the efficiency of the system, Putin claimed, from that point on, he was to appoint all the governors throughout the eight time zones of Russia. His appetite for power was not limited to the confines of Russia alone. In the Fall of 2004, Putin actively involved himself in the Ukrainian presidential elections trying to ensure that power remained in the hands of the authoritarian clique in Kiev. But something marvelous happened. This time, Putin failed.

Fortunately for the rest of the world, Putin’s foreign policy adventures have been nowhere near as successful as those in the domestic front. However, that has not stopped him from expressing his frustration at the fact that Russia can no longer dominate its neighbors and shape them in its own autocratic image. In a recent remark, the Russian leader observed that the “collapse of the Soviet Union was the greatest geo-political catastrophe of the 20th Century.” Forget the World War I, multiple Soviet famines that killed millions, the Gulag, Holocaust, or Pol Pot’s massacres in Cambodia. The mostly peaceful dissolution of the Soviet empire, in Putin’s mind, was the worst of them all. Adding to the insult, in response to the demands to acknowledge the Soviet occupation of the Baltic republics, the Russian ambassador to the European Union, Sergey Yastrzhembski, argued with a straight face that the occupation of these countries took place in accordance with the wishes of the native peoples who, of course, were later to be shot, imprisoned and deported in large numbers to the death camps of Siberia.

The unwillingness to face up to its imperial past as well as its menacing behavior toward new democracies in its neighborhood has much to do with Russia’s imperial present. Unlike every other European colonial power that has apologized for the wrongdoings of the past, Russia to this day has not renounced imperialism. Russia, to be sure, remains an empire. Besides its genocidal oppression against Chechens, Russia has imposed a direct presidential rule over the Tatars, Bashkurts, and tens of other nationalities against their wishes. A handful of individuals within the walls of the Kremlin continue to decide the fate of millions of non-Russians who have very little say in their own governance.

From ferocious Romans in the late Antiquity period to benign Habsburgs in 19th Century, history demonstrates that empires and democracy have never blended well together. Empire, by nature, is the antithesis of republic. Democracy ordinarily takes root in a republic that is based on an identifiable constituency which sees itself at the center of the polity. Russia has never been a polity as such, or in any other way. As the renowned historian of Russia Richard Pipes has argued, throughout its long history, “Russia was not so much a society as an conglomeration of tens of thousands of separate rural settlements” kept together by awesome, all–powerful despots seated at the Kremlin. While all empires entail a great degree of oppression in regard to those colonized, its extreme centralization and unwillingness to relegate any sort of power to the localities made Russia exceptional even among traditional empires.

Through this method of rule, not only did the Russian state oppress the colonized but also the vast majority of its ethnic core – the Russians. The extreme atomization of the society is most evident in the fact that until 1861, nearly 80 percent of the Russians were serfs. Precisely, as a result of this deep lack of social cohesiveness among ethnic Russians, the modern Russian identity came to be formed almost solely around imperial notions of the self.

What is most disturbing about today’s Russia is not Vladimir Putin per se, but the fact that Putin represents the mindset of a great many Russians. It helps to know that unlike Peter the Great, Lenin or Stalin, Vladimir Putin has actually been elected to presidency by the majority of the Russian people. His career in KGB notwithstanding, Putin’s background contains features that are common with most ordinary Russians. In most of his actions, including the crude interference in the elections in Ukraine or strong friendship with the President of Belarus, Aleksandr Lukashenka, dubbed as the last dictator of Europe, Putin echoes the sentiments of large numbers of Russians who feel the need to maintain some type of barrier against the West. One could indeed argue that at the heart of this attitude stands the age-old enmity with the Teutonic folks. Still, this self-defeating course is more about Russia’s own identity that that of the West.

Russia cannot imagine itself as a democracy because, in the minds of many Russians, this would mean an end to “Great Russia.” They may even be right. In fact, every time Russia loosened up in the past, it did lose territories. During the revolutionary upheaval of 1917, Russia lost much of its empire, only to regain it later through the Bolshevik arms. Seventy years later, the reforms of Mikhail Gorbachev cost Russia almost all of Eastern Europe and the parts of what was then the Soviet Union. Even in places like Chechnya, when given a slight chance, non-Russians have revolted against the Kremlin’s rule.

The question least asked however is what this “Great Russia” gave to the Russians in the first place? Having never achieved material prosperity in its history, Russia’s current economic output is less than that of Los Angeles county alone. Most Russians are living at a subsistence level. With such great economic and scientific potential, the nation has living standards below those of 96 countries. All of this reminds me of the old German war veteran who was recently asked about his thoughts on losing the World War II. He said: “We fought with all our might to prevent that outcome. At the time that was completely unacceptable to us. But looking back, I realize that it was a good thing that we lost.” If the Russians eventually embark on this uneasy path to democracy, perhaps some day they might look back and realize that it was good for them to lose their empire. Otherwise, they will forever remain captives of the Great Russia that brought such misery to so many.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Askar Askarov is a PhD candidate in Russian/Soviet History at the University of Maryland.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Russia
KEYWORDS: bush43; putin; russia; russian; russiavisit; tyranny; veday
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To: sergey1973; lizol

During my 12 years in the US army, I got to work on 2 UN missions (what eye openners those were to the UN corruption) but the interesting thing is, I met a lot of educated black africans and all of them admitted they wished the empires had not left Africa. They were better off as colonies.


21 posted on 05/19/2005 8:15:21 PM PDT by jb6 (Truth == Christ)
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To: sergey1973
what Russia needs is a decentralization (not disintegration) with Central Authorities having minimal powers like foreign policy and defense

Russia had that for 8 years under Yeltsin. Was it better off?

22 posted on 05/19/2005 8:17:13 PM PDT by jb6 (Truth == Christ)
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To: RusIvan; jb6
"genocidal oppression of the chechens" says everything to me. I wouldn't even know where to start in addressing this kind of ignorance.

Heading off Sat morning to a place a mere 100 miles south of Beslan, I wonder just what more it would take for people to get a clue.

23 posted on 05/19/2005 9:14:35 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: lizol; jb6; RusIvan; FormerLib; katnip; Agrarian
The question least asked however is what this “Great Russia” gave to the Russians in the first place? Having never achieved material prosperity in its history, Russia’s current economic output is less than that of Los Angeles county alone. Most Russians are living at a subsistence level.

Typical western thinking. Money or money, your choice.
Don't even consider or mention the incredibly beautiful architecture, the maintenance of Christianity while the rest of Europe was doing the dark ages, Andrei Rublev, Tchaivosky, balalaika music - Flight of the Bumblebee, the Bolshoi, the Moscow circus, znamenny chant, Pushkin, Dostoevsky, Gogol, Tolstoy, Danilova, Taglioni, St. Seraphim, Berdyaev, Rimsky-Korsakov, Pavlova.

And that's just off the top of my head.

24 posted on 05/19/2005 9:35:14 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: jb6
Askar Askarov is a PhD candidate in Russian/Soviet History at the University of Maryland.

With an MA at Stanford and looks to be of Azerbaijani heritage.

25 posted on 05/19/2005 9:38:30 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: lizol; jb6
so it can become successful democracy ?

Translated....so Russia can become a country with a walmart and mcdonalds on every corner instead of a church, and so they can have endless commercials screaming at people to BUY!!!, like we do, and so they can be a merchant society like us. Where everything is measured by money and your car, and your front lawn.

When Putin sets this all up, America will be happier with him. Of course by then Christianity will be nearly outlawed in this country, the homosexuals will be in the White House, and we will be routinely killing off both the unborn, elderly, and brain damaged at rates so breathtaking that our population will be primarily comprised of immigrants.

26 posted on 05/19/2005 9:54:11 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: jb6
Fact is, in Russia you can feed a family of 3 well for a month on $60.

You must REALLY like potatoes.

27 posted on 05/19/2005 10:11:52 PM PDT by lodi90
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To: lizol
That Mr. Askarov looks like Bulgakov's character Sharikov ("The heart of a dog). The book's about a man (Sharikov) made out of a dog during a miraculous surgical operation: 'Zina!' cried Philip Philipovich anxiously. 'Clear away the vodka, my dear. We don't need it any more . . . What have you been reading?' He suddenly had a mental picture of a desert island, palm trees, and a man dressed in goatskins. 'I'll bet he says Robinson Crusoe . . .'he thought. 'That guy . . . what's his name . . . Engels' correspondence with . . . hell, what d'you call him ... oh - Kautsky.' Bormenthal's forkful of turkey meat stopped in mid-air and Philip Philipovich choked on his wine. Sharikov seized this moment to gulp down his vodka. Philip Philipovich put his elbows on the table, stared at Sharikov and asked: 'What comment can you make on what you've read?' Sharikov shrugged. 'I don't agree.' 'With whom - Engels or Kautsky?' 'With neither of 'em,' replied Sharikov. 'That is most remarkable. Anybody who says that . . . Well, what would you suggest instead?' 'Suggest? I dunno . . . They just write and write all that rot ... all about some congress and some Germans . . . makes my head reel. Take everything away from the bosses, then divide it up . . .' 'Just as I thought!' exclaimed Philip Philipovich, slapping the tablecloth with his palm. 'Just as I thought.' 'And how is this to be done?' asked Bormenthal with interest. 'How to do it?' Sharikov, grown loquacious with wine, explained garrulously: 'Easy. Fr'instance - here's one guy with seven rooms and forty pairs of trousers and there's another guy who has to eat out of dustbins.' 'I suppose that remark about the seven rooms is a hint about me?' asked Philip Philipovich with a haughty raise of the eyebrows. Sharikov hunched his shoulders and said no more. 'All right, I've nothing against fair shares. How many patients did you turn away yesterday, doctor?' 'Thirty-nine,' was Bormenthal's immediate reply. 'H'm . . . 390 roubles, shared between us three. I won't count Zina and Darya Petrovna. Right, Sharikov - that means your share is 130 roubles. Kindly hand it over.' 'Hey, wait a minute,' said Sharikov, beginning to be scared. 'What's the idea? What d'you mean?' 'I mean the cat and the tap,' Philip Philipovich suddenly roared, dropping his mask of ironic imperturbability. 'Philip Philipovich!' exclaimed Bormenthal anxiously. 'Don't interrupt. The scene you created yesterday was intolerable, and thanks to you I had to turn away all my patients. You were leaping around in the bathroom like a savage, smashing everything and jamming the taps. Who killed Madame Polasukher's cat? Who . . .' 'The day before yesterday, Sharikov, you bit a lady you met on the staircase,' put in Bormenthal. 'You ought to be . . .' roared Philip Philipovich. 'But she slapped me across the mouth,' whined Sharikov 'She can't go doing that to me!' 'She slapped you because you pinched her on the bosom,' shouted Bormenthal, knocking over a glass. 'You stand there and . . .' 'You belong to the lowest possible stage of development,' Philip Philipovich shouted him down. 'You are still in the formative stage. You are intellectually weak, all your actions are purely bestial. Yet you allow yourself in the presence of two university-educated men to offer advice, with quite intolerable familiarity, on a cosmic scale and of quite cosmic stupidity, on the redistribution of wealth . . . and at the same time you eat toothpaste . . .' Copyright 1968 in the English translation by Michael Glenny Collins and Harvill Press London, and Harcourt, Brace & World Inc, New York.
28 posted on 05/20/2005 12:21:58 AM PDT by Long Eared Hair
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To: GSlob

These few lines of his are an accurate summary of all known Russian history in its psychosociological aspect, not just of its soviet period - he built better than he knew. ==

It is YOUR generalization not his. So Zinoviev isn't guilty but you. Don't hide behind him.

As an aside, one Karl Marx characterized pre-soviet Russia of mid-19 century as "asiatic despotism". ==

So now you rely on father of communism to draw your critisizm on Russia? What next? Recall some verses of Mao Czhe Dun or Hitler? You may find very critical summary of Russia in "Mein Kampf".

As they say: if the shoe fits, wear it.==

I would say if vision is impared then find glasses which fits. Accualy I recall you one more proverb: "Po Senke shapka" or "Svinia vsegda griuz naidet".
Means whoever is the seeker then soever his stereotypes:).


29 posted on 05/20/2005 12:50:57 AM PDT by RusIvan
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To: RusIvan

As you are so proud of your pile - continue sitting in it by all means.


30 posted on 05/20/2005 5:59:44 AM PDT by GSlob
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To: GSlob
As an aside, one Karl Marx characterized pre-soviet Russia of mid-19 century as "asiatic despotism".

He also wrote that the Communist Revolution in Russia were next to impossible, but if it happaned there it would be a huge setback to the Communism.

He wanted Communist Revolution to start in Western Europe and North America. And with the growth of EU, integration of North America and free trade globalisation we might be getting closer to the fulfilment of his wish.

31 posted on 05/20/2005 6:17:16 AM PDT by A. Pole (Heraclitus: "Nothing endures but change.")
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To: GSlob

As you are so proud of your pile - continue sitting in it by all means.==

Everyone has his miscomings. And I know them but I would like to discuss them with goodwill people only.

Another russian rethoric question inroduced by Lermontov which you probably know but forgot: "But whose are the jury?"
IMO the jury of those who try to judge Russia has to be exemplerary.
The decendants of "puns of Pildulskii" or SS men from baltics are not. OR those as the author just recently climbed down from the asian mountains even more.


32 posted on 05/20/2005 6:21:03 AM PDT by RusIvan
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To: RusIvan

Could you please explain to me what "puns of Pildulskii" are - those ones compared by you to "SS men from baltics"?


33 posted on 05/20/2005 7:12:09 AM PDT by lizol
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To: lizol

Probably followers of Pilsudsky (sp?) - Polish dictator back to 192x. "pun" - maybe it's the Polish word for "Sir".


34 posted on 05/20/2005 7:59:18 AM PDT by Long Eared Hair
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To: Long Eared Hair; RusIvan
Aha, so the Poles in general.

"Polskiye pany" was a common deifintion of the Poles, used by bolsheviks, during Polish - Soviet war 1919-1921.

It's related to the fact, that in Polish language words "mister" (or "sir")and "lord" ar the same - "pan" (plural - "panowie", but in vulgar language spoken by simple people - "pany").

So - when someone stupid heard, that Poles call each other "pan" - like for example a farmer Mr (pan) Jan Kowalski, or a nobleman Mr (pan) Jerzy Krasnodebski, or a worker Mr (pan) Jozef Nowak, or a factory owner Mr (pan) Zbigniew Krajewski - he thought probably, that all of them are "Polskiye pany" (Polish Lords)

But of course this is not a stereotype (sarcasm).
35 posted on 05/20/2005 8:29:07 AM PDT by lizol
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To: lodi90

A dollar will buy you a loaf of very good bread (not that Wonder bread crap) and 2kg of potatoes. I go food shopping often enough (actually my wife has stopped me, I buy to much extra crap) and a loaf of equal quality bread costs us $3-$4.


36 posted on 05/20/2005 8:57:27 AM PDT by jb6 (Truth == Christ)
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To: lizol

The name "Polskiye pany" was used by Bolshevick propaganda before the WWII. In fact, the Bolshevicks meant their class enemies ("capitalists and landlords") in Poland. I think the commissars took care to explain it to the Red Army soldiers. But the confusion you write about, could occur, I think.
Did the Polish peasants used the word "pan" addressing to themselves before WWII? Taking into account that at that time they were used to bow from the waist having taken off their hats in order to salute their landlords as well as kissed landlords' hands, I doubt it.


37 posted on 05/20/2005 8:57:38 AM PDT by Long Eared Hair
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To: jb6

Under Yeltsin Russia had not a decentralization (in a normal sense of the word) but an anarchy. Each governor run its province as his own fiefdom. It was bunch of mini-dictatorships under "Grandpa Yeltsin" as a formal head of state.

What I'm suggesting is the model under which federal government sets clear parameters for local self-government (i.e. separation of powers, electability of governor, etc). Local governments under reasonable and clear federal guidelines should run most of the local affairs. In current model almost all powers are concentrated with Putin Kremlin so any local problem is naturally blamed on Kremlin. Basically, proper balance of power is a quite a daunting task, but definitely not an unachievable one.


38 posted on 05/20/2005 9:07:32 AM PDT by sergey1973 (Russian American Political Blogger, Arm Chair Strategist)
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To: MarMema

As long as they are "deserving" third worlders, especially Islamics, it's all worth it.


39 posted on 05/20/2005 9:15:05 AM PDT by jb6 (Truth == Christ)
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To: jb6

"During my 12 years in the US army, I got to work on 2 UN missions (what eye openners those were to the UN corruption) but the interesting thing is, I met a lot of educated black africans and all of them admitted they wished the empires had not left Africa. They were better off as colonies."

Not surprising in light of the monstrous regimes that sprung up in Africa after independence (Idi Amin, Mobutu, Bokassa, Mugabe, etc.). Actually I mentioned in my post that there were Empires that did a lot of good for the world. I.e. British Empire has overall quite a mixed record, but for a number of places in Africa it did a lot of positive things, like building Railroads, schools, bridges and providing world class education in its colonies.


40 posted on 05/20/2005 9:20:49 AM PDT by sergey1973 (Russian American Political Blogger, Arm Chair Strategist)
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