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Karabakh Lessons For Sub-Carpathian Rus'

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  • Karabakh Lessons For Sub-Carpathian Rus'

    KARABAKH LESSONS FOR SUB-CARPATHIAN RUS'
    Alexander Yegorov

    en.fondsk.ru
    06.04.2009
    Eurasia

    History is known to repeat itself, replaying as a farce what initially
    was a drama. Under a certain combination of circumstances, however,
    it can revert from farce to tragedy.

    In the early 2009, there was a general atmosphere of euphoria in
    the ranks of Rusin activists in Ukraine's Transcarpathia - as well
    as in some countries bordering Ukraine - as they were under the
    impression that already this year Russia would recognize the Republic
    of Sub-Carpathian Rus'.

    Rusins, a small nation inhabiting the Transcarpathian Oblast in
    western Ukraine, remained in obscurity throughout the 1990ies and the
    early 2000ies, but the situation started to change after the "orange
    revolution" propelled the anti-Russian V. Yushchenko to power in Kyiv
    in 2004. Since then the public attention increasingly turned to the
    Rusin problem.

    State-controlled Russian TV channels ran several programs expressing
    compassion for Rusins who survived genocide during World War I and
    are currently facing the assimilationist aspirations harbored by
    the Ukrainian administration and by their notoriously nationalist
    Galician neighbors.

    In 2008 a series of rallies in Mukachevo culminated in the
    declaration of the Rusin autonomy. The Security Service of Ukraine
    reacted immediately by opening investigations targeting Rusin
    leaders. A conference on Rusin problems convened in December,
    2008 in Rostov-on-Don, Russia which - despite avoiding politically
    charged issues - instilled far-reaching expectations among its
    Rusin participants. Somewhat later the conference "Experience and
    Problems of Rusin National Self-Determination" (Budapest, March,
    2008) went political and asked the attending parliamentarians
    from the regions where Rusin communities resided to hold hearings
    on the Rusin nationhood and to submit the Rusin issue to such
    international organizations as the UN, the Council of Europe, OCSE,
    the Interparliamentary Assembly on Orthodoxy, etc.

    The process kept gaining momentum. Information spread shortly that
    leaders of the Republic of Sub-Carpathian Rus' were received in
    Moscow by influential negotiating partners who allegedly promised
    that Russia would recognize the Rusin Republic but indicated that
    the political step would have to be synchronized with Mensk and
    highlighted the importance of "the gas theme". What the Russian fuel
    and energy business might be interested in the context was of course
    the Trans-Carpathian segment of the gas pipeline used to supply natural
    gas from Russia to Europe (the recent deal between Kyiv and Brussels
    on the modernization of Ukraine's gas pipeline network made it rather
    difficult to go on positioning Russia as the "energy superpower").

    At this point, it makes sense to recall the events that took place
    over 20 years ago, in20the late 1987 - early 1988. At that time
    delegations from the separatist Nagorno-Karabakh autonomous region
    of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic frequented offices in the
    USSR Communist Party headquarters in Moscow attempting to secure the
    administration's support for the transfer of Karabakh from Azerbaijan
    to Armenia, both being the Republic's of the USSR. Subsequently
    the Stepanakert parliament put the issue on its agenda. Armenian
    activists were absolutely convinced that they were championing a
    worthy cause. They supplied serious historical and legal arguments
    supporting their position and ample evidence of the violations of
    the Armenian autonomy's rights in Azerbaijan, cited the practice
    of implanting the Azerbaijani culture, and referred to the petition
    to have Karabakh incorporated into Armenia which had been signed by
    practically the entire population of the enclave. In all respects the
    situation in Transcarpathia since its incorporation into the Ukrainian
    Soviet Socialist Republic 1946 has been similar. Two decades ago the
    Karabakh envoys seemed to have met with understanding in the high
    offices in Moscow. They were advised to raise the issue and told that
    the center's support would follow.

    Moreover, vague hints were dropped that Gorbachev was on their side...

    What happened afterwards is well-known - it transpired after
    February 20, 1988 that Moscow had no intention to infringe on the
    territorial integrity of the Azerbaij ani Soviet Socialist Republic,
    while Karabakh was actually just one of the cards in the games played
    between the political factions of the increasingly irresponsible
    Communist bureaucracy. Notably, the games eventually resulted in the
    demise of the USSR.

    By the way, the Karabakh activists' naive conviction that all
    the decision-making was in the hands of Moscow was not entirely
    groundless. At that time both Armenia and Azerbaijan were Republics of
    the USSR and an overhaul of its internal territorial and administrative
    divisions should not have presented a major problem 1. Things have
    changed, though, and the current belief of the Rusin activists that
    now - 18 years after the Soviet Union's collapse and the emergence
    of independent Ukraine - it is somehow possible to resolve problems
    as serious as the one confronting Transcarpathia by entraining Moscow
    can only be explained by the provincial narrowness of vision. Whatever
    Russian parliamentarians or other politicians promise these days is
    no guarantee that the bold dreams of the Rusin leaders are going to
    materialize. The hope that the people of Transcarpathia will get a
    chance to decide for themselves if they are vocal enough and draw
    the attention to their situation globally is equally naive.

    Will the Rusin activists steer a course which can lead not only to a
    total rout of the Rusin national movement and an irreversible loss of
    any prospects for their truly amazing ho meland, but also to serious
    perturbations of Europe's geopolitical architecture? A look at the map
    helps to realize that Rusins have nowhere to expect material support
    from. They have no "ethnic relative" such as Armenia in the case of
    Karabakh, and hopes to avoid bloodshed - or to draw the attention of
    the rest of the world to the plight of the victim's of Yushchenko's
    nationalist regime - are a perilous illusion. Russia still seems
    unsure that its recognition of South Ossetia and Abkhazia cannot
    be withdrawn and is, albeit gently, pushing Transdnistria back into
    Moldova2, and all that can be expected from Moscow in the case of a
    Ukrainian crackdown on Rusins in Transcarpathia is that the Foreign
    Ministry will churn out a disapproving statement on the occasion. Kyiv
    will easily convince Europe that Rusins are agents of the Russian
    imperialism and thus forge a pretext for a NATO "peacekeeping"
    intervention, the Ukrainian gas transmission system of course being
    the rescue mission's priority. For the Euro-Atlantic community, the
    escalation would serve as justification of further efforts aimed at
    the long-desired expansion to the east...

    It is extremely important that the radical Rusin leaders refrain from
    any reckless moves likely to have far-reaching consequences.

    It is easy to understand the impatience of the Rusin activists who
    regard Ukraine under Yushchenko as Europe's ill part and20worry about
    missing their chance in the case of its disintegration (evolution
    into federation or confederation). However, such developments -
    even if that is indeed what the future holds - are not a matter of
    the nearest time. What should be at the top of the agenda at the
    moment is the strengthening of the movement, the advancement of
    the Rusin identity in the complex settings of Transcapathia (where
    the population in many cases has a dual national identity and is
    religiously heterogeneous, while Kyiv is trying to undermine the
    Rusin movement), and the broadening of the activity of organizations
    advocating the rights of Rusins. This work is necessary to unite the
    Rusin population in Transcarpathia.

    Currently there is no future in radicalism which manifests itself in
    calls for an independent Sub-Carpathian Rus'. The more vain hopes
    are offered to people today the deeper will be the disappointments
    awaiting them.

    ____________ 1The charting of administrative borders in Central Asia in
    the 1920ies, the plans of passing territories from Russia to Belorussia
    and Ukraine in the late 1920ies-early 1930ies, and the transfer of
    the Crimea from Russia to Ukraine - N. Khrushchev's generous gift
    to the latter - are examples of redrawing the administrative borders
    within the Soviet Union.

    2In contrast to the predominantly agrarian and weakly urbanized
    Transcarpathia, Transdnistria is a heavily industrialized region=2
    0with well-established administrative bodies.
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