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  • Stalin's Poison Pills

    The Moscow Times
    Friday, August 29, 2008
    Stalin's Poison Pills
    By Paul Goble

    A lot of attention was focused on the symbolic importance when Russian
    forces occupied Gori, the birthplace of Stalin. Few reflected, however, that
    this conflict, like many others in the post-Soviet states, is the product of
    what many in business call "poison pills," arrangements that make it
    difficult, if not dangerous, for anyone to try to takeover or even change
    the basic arrangements of another firm.

    If the peoples of the region and the international community are to overcome
    this crisis and the others that are clearly on the horizon in this part of
    the world, they need to understand the nature and location of the poison
    pills Stalin inserted in his system and the dangers of swallowing them.

    When Stalin created the Soviet Union -- and it was his project far more than
    anyone else's -- he built it on the basis of politicized, territorialized
    and hierarchically arranged ethnicity, a system that could function only if
    Moscow used the kind of force that Stalin deployed with such consistent
    viciousness.

    Before the 1917 Revolution, many people in the Russian Empire did not
    identify themselves in ethnic terms. The tsarist state did not encourage
    them to do so, and many saw themselves in terms of class or faith. But
    Stalin insisted that everyone have an official nationality because he
    understood that you cannot play the divide-and-rule politics of building an
    empire if people don't identify themselves as members of one or another
    nationality.

    Moreover, Stalin linked nationality to territory, something the tsars had
    tried in almost every case to avoid. No book was more important during
    Soviet times than the periodic editions of the administrative-territorial
    divisions of the country. That is because your rights as a member of an
    ethnic group depended on whether Moscow gave you the status of an autonomous
    formation or a union republic.

    But there was one more aspect to this. Many people believe that Stalin drew
    the lines so as to put all or most members of a given nationality together.
    This is nonsense. He drew lines to create tensions between ethnic groups,
    ensuring there was always a local minority that would do Moscow's bidding in
    return for being protected by the Soviet center. The Armenian-dominated
    enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan is the most famous of these
    arrangements, but it is far from the only one.

    And finally, Stalin instituted the Orwellian principle that "all animals are
    equal but some animals are more equal than others," an arrangement that
    guarantees interethnic hatred. Members of small nationalities without a
    territory got few or no ethnic or linguistic rights and were slated for
    absorption by others. Members of larger groups got such rights on their
    territories but nowhere else. But members of the largest nationality -- the
    Russians -- got such rights regardless of where they lived.

    What were the consequences of this system? First, Stalin's system not only
    raised the importance of nationality and borders, but it ensured that anyone
    who sought to dismantle his totalitarianism would have to cope with ethnic
    anger and borders that guaranteed it would likely get worse.

    Second, when Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev did reduce the level of
    coercion and introduced glasnost, he guaranteed that the Soviet Union would
    fall into pieces, not along economic lines or regional ones but precisely
    along the lines Stalin had drawn.

    And third, when the Soviet Union collapsed, both the Russian leadership and
    the international community, largely because they hoped to make the process
    of imperial decay as easy and peaceful as possible, decided to accept
    certain aspects of Stalin's system -- namely, the borders he drew and the
    ethnic hierarchy he established -- while expecting that other aspects of
    Stalin's system, his tyranny, be jettisoned.

    Why did this happen? For many, it was simpler and more convenient than doing
    anything else. Many in Western governments had no idea about the location,
    let along the character, of the union republics, and even fewer knew about
    the autonomous ones. It was easier to accept the union republics as the only
    possible countries and their borders as the only acceptable ones, especially
    since addressing the bigger problems would have taken a long time.

    And further, any focus on autonomous republics and their rights would have
    put at risk in the first instance the Russian Federation. After all, maps
    showed that 53 percent of the territory of that republic was covered by
    non-Russian autonomies. Addressing its imperial nature, many feared, could
    trigger "a nuclear Yugoslavia."

    But what has that decision meant? Most obviously, it has meant that few have
    been prepared to focus on the legitimate rights of ethnic minorities who
    feel they are trapped within a larger country or to consider that Stalin's
    borders were not designed to resolve conflicts but to intensify them. Anyone
    who looks around Eurasia will see that in many countries, and in Russia
    above all, the demands of minorities are only growing, and border tensions
    are on the increase.

    But that 1991 decision has had another consequence, which continues to
    reverberate throughout the region. Stalin made his system work by means of
    an authoritarian state. Just because so many people wished for an end to
    authoritarianism has not guaranteed in Russia or elsewhere that this would
    happen, and his commitment to ethnocratic arrangements in which one ethnic
    group dominates others continues as a policy imperative, again regardless of
    what anyone wants.

    The events in Georgia are only the latest example of what happens because
    governments and peoples in the region continue to be forced 17 years after
    the end of the Soviet Union to swallow Stalin's poison pill. These events
    will not be the last. And the ones ahead, including more ethnic conflicts
    and more authoritarianism, will not only be more serious but will affect the
    Russian Federation first of all.

    Paul Goble is director of research at the Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy in
    Baku.
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