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V Day celebs in Russia reveals deepening political, social tensions

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  • V Day celebs in Russia reveals deepening political, social tensions

    World Socialist Web Site, MI
    May 11 2005

    Victory Day celebration in Russia reveals deepening political and
    social tensions

    By Andrea Peters

    While Russia's President Vladimir Putin had intended the 60th
    anniversary of the Soviet defeat of Nazi Germany as an occasion to
    boost Russia's standing in world affairs, the day's events largely
    served to reveal the depth of the political and social tensions
    wracking the country.

    In the week leading up to the Victory Day celebrations, the capital
    was transformed into an armed camp, with the center of Moscow placed
    under virtual lockdown. Foot and automobile traffic was banned except
    by special pass, major subway stations were closed, and roads leading
    to the city were cleared of private vehicles.

    Those working in downtown office buildings were told to stay off
    balconies lest they become targets for the hundreds of snipers placed
    on nearby rooftops. According to one report, government officials
    promised to expel the homeless and anyone found without a Moscow
    residence permit from the city.

    This extraordinary security was publicly justified by the attendance
    of 50 foreign heads of state and the threat posed by Chechen
    terrorists. Last year's Victory Day celebrations in Grozny were
    bombed, killing 32 people, including the pro-Moscow president of the
    Caucasian republic, Akhmad Kadyrov.

    Moscow's residents were encouraged not to venture out of their homes,
    and if possible, to leave the city. Attendance at the festivities in
    Red Square - which included a military parade replete with marching
    bands from various countries, Soviet-era tanks, and an air show - was
    by special invitation only.

    The Moscow public, which usually celebrates the holiday on the city's
    central streets, was relegated to marking the anniversary in the
    parks and fairgrounds on the outskirts of the city. This geographic
    separation served as a telling reflection of the growth of social
    inequality and the vast gulf separating working people from the new
    ruling elite.

    While the official ceremony included the participation of dozens of
    veterans, many survivors of the hostilities were denied access to Red
    Square even to observe the event. `I didn't need an invitation to go
    to the front,' said one 79-year old veteran in disgust after being
    turned away from the parade area because he lacked the necessary
    document.

    The Putin administration is widely disliked by pensioners and those
    who served in World War II because of recent changes in social
    welfare policy implemented by his government. Earlier this year,
    thousands of pensioners took to the streets of Moscow, St.
    Petersburg, and other cities across the country to protest the
    drastic cuts in welfare payments resulting from a new law that
    transformed social benefits-in-kind - such as free public
    transportation - into monetary compensation of a significantly lower
    value.

    The celebration of the USSR's victory in the Great Patriotic War (as
    World War II is known in Russia) has a different significance for the
    millions of ordinary people whose families made tremendous sacrifices
    to defeat the Nazis than it does for the section of Russian
    capitalists and ex-bureaucrats grouped around Putin.

    The Putin Administration carefully choreographed the Victory Day
    events to pay homage to the Soviet Union and the Russian nation. The
    May 9 ceremony was replete with hammer and sickle flags, displays of
    Soviet military machinery, portraits of Lenin, and veterans waving
    red flowers.

    While ordinary people may have viewed these symbols as a
    commemoration of the efforts made by the Soviet people to defeat
    Hitler, for the Putin administration they are a vehicle for promoting
    Russian nationalism. An opponent of the socialist traditions of the
    1917 revolution and an outspoken anti-communist, Putin correctly
    understands the Soviet patriotism of the Stalinist bureaucracy as a
    form of Russian nationalism.

    This was the spirit embodied in Stalin's policy of building
    `socialism in one country.' The Kremlin designed the May 9
    celebrations to pay tribute to these traditions, while at the same
    time tapping into the pride and nostalgia that many ordinary Russians
    feel for the accomplishments of the Soviet period.

    Although not on display at the Victory Day celebrations in Red
    Square, the lead-up to the anniversary was accompanied by a
    government-backed attempt to resurrect the image of Stalin. In the
    weeks prior to May 9, commemorative posters appeared with his
    picture. The `Victory Train' that arrived in Moscow's Belarussky
    train station, which retraced the route traveled by victorious Soviet
    soldiers returning from the front, was outfitted with a giant
    portrait of the dictator on its engine. A statue of Stalin,
    Roosevelt, and Churchill had been set for unveiling in time for the
    May 9 celebrations in Moscow, but, concerned over the opposition it
    might unleash, city officials decided to scrap the plans.

    The city of Volgograd, previously known as Stalingrad, had a new
    statue of the three signatories of the Yalta agreement created to
    mark this week's anniversary. The local Communist Party has proposed
    changing the city's name back to Stalingrad. In Mirny, a city in the
    eastern Siberian republic of Yakutia-Sakha, a new Stalin statue was
    one of the centerpieces of the day's festivities. Leaders of the city
    of Oryol, a few hundred miles outside of Moscow, recently called for
    the restoration of Stalin memorials previously removed from the city
    and the return of Stalin's name to streets that had been renamed
    after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

    Putin himself has been careful not to praise Stalin too directly,
    most recently describing him as a `tyrant' in an interview with a
    German newspaper. An open move by the Kremlin itself to resurrect
    Stalin would only provide ammunition for the Bush Administration's
    attacks on the Putin administration, which it regularly criticizes
    for eroding Russia's limited democratic institutions.

    These efforts to rehabilitate Stalin in conjunction with the 60th
    anniversary of the defeat of the Nazis are based on a complete
    falsification of the role the dictator played in World War II. The
    Soviet Union triumphed over fascism in spite of Stalin's crimes. His
    extermination campaign against those most closely identified with the
    October 1917 revolution - including the murder of the Soviet Union's
    best military generals - his betrayals of the German and Spanish
    working class in the period leading up the war, and his efforts to
    reach an accommodation with Nazi Germany, left the USSR completely
    unprepared for Hitler's assault.

    Putin speaks in the interests of that section of the Russia's ruling
    oligarchy that feels the pro-US orientation of the Kremlin during the
    1990s undermined the country's national interests and their own power
    and privileges. The evocation of Soviet imagery surrounding the Great
    Patriotic War and the resurrection of Stalin are aimed at cultivating
    nationalism within the population and convincing people that the
    social collapse that Russia has experienced over the past 15 years is
    a result of the loss of the country's great power status, rather than
    the restoration of capitalism.

    Despite the Kremlin's best efforts, the 60th anniversary celebrations
    revealed the increasingly precarious position of Putin's government,
    both at home and abroad.

    They were partially upstaged by Bush's stop in the Latvian capital,
    where he delivered a speech repudiating the entire post-war agreement
    hammered out by Stalin, Roosevelt, and Churchill at Yalta in 1945 as
    an appeasement of tyranny.

    Coming on the heels of months of criticism by the US administration
    of the anti-democratic character of Putin's regime, Bush's comments
    were an open provocation. The Russian president responded by
    defending the actions of the Soviet army in the Baltic region. `Our
    people not only defended their homeland, they liberated 11 countries
    in Europe,' said Putin. The same day, in an interview with the
    Russian president aired on the CBS weekly news program 60 Minutes,
    Putin rebuffed American criticisms of his regime by pointing to the
    anti-democratic character of the US electoral college system and the
    way in which Bush was installed in office by the Supreme Court in
    2000.

    In another affront to the Putin administration, after the May 9
    ceremonies and prior to leaving Russia for a visit with the
    pro-American government of Mikhail Saakashvili of Georgia, Bush met
    with so-called democracy advocates and opponents of the Kremlin
    regime.

    The 60th anniversary was also marred by a series of diplomatic
    failures for the Russian government, pointing to the political
    fracturing of Moscow's post-Soviet sphere of influence. The
    Presidents of Estonia and Lithuania boycotted the festivities in
    order to demonstrate their orientation to the West and to promote
    anti-Russian nationalism at home.

    Georgian President Saakashvili likewise declined the Kremlin's
    invitation in protest over Moscow's failure to set a deadline for the
    agreed-upon closure of Russian military bases on Georgian territory.
    The leader of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, also failed to show up, as a
    result of his country's ongoing dispute with Armenia over control of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    The troubled state of political relations in Russia's traditional
    sphere of influence found clearest expression in the summit held May
    8 between the leaders of the countries of the Commonwealth of
    Independent States (CIS), the political bloc created out of the
    former Soviet countries in the aftermath of the collapse of the USSR.
    The fate of the organization has been thrown into question by the
    growth of American influence over the countries on Russia's western
    border and in Central Asia.

    On Sunday, Viktor Yushchenko, the pro-US president of Ukraine, who
    recently rose to power as the result of the US-backed `Orange
    Revolution,' described the CIS as being of `little use' without
    significant reforms reflecting the divergent political trajectories
    of the organization's member countries. The Ukraine, as well as CIS
    member states Georgia and Moldova, are seeking entry into NATO and
    the European Union. While Moscow has indicated that it is willing to
    take the lead in crafting changes to the CIS in an attempt to boost
    the economic integration of the region, the bloc is increasingly
    regarded as a largely decorative institution.
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