Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Column: Putin Seeks To Reclaim Russia's Lost Tribes

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Column: Putin Seeks To Reclaim Russia's Lost Tribes

    COLUMN: PUTIN SEEKS TO RECLAIM RUSSIA'S LOST TRIBES

    Valley News, NH
    March 10 2014

    Michael Moran

    At 4:45 a.m. on Sept. 1, 1939, a German warship opened fire on the city
    of Danzig, a Polish-administered enclave -- overwhelmingly populated
    by ethnic Germans -- that had been separated from Germany since World
    War I.

    Throughout the previous decade, Adolf Hitler had intimidated
    neighboring states into relinquishing regions where German speakers
    made their homes: France in the Rhineland in 1936, the Anschluss
    absorption of Austria in 1938, followed by the most famous such
    capitulation, the Franco-British appeasement that forced Czechoslovakia
    to hand Germany the Sudetenland region -- again, largely populated
    by ethnic Germans.

    But it was in Danzig where bullying failed and true violence began.

    Among the city's residents was Gunter Grass, a German boy whose
    description of the opening salvos of World War II would later win
    him a Nobel Prize for his novel The Tin Drum.

    It's so easily written: machine guns, twin turrets. Might it not
    have been a cloudburst, a hailstorm, the deployment of a late-summer
    thunderstorm like the one that accompanied my birth? I was too sleepy,
    such speculations were beyond me, and so, the sounds still fresh in my
    ear, like all sleepyheads I simply and aptly called a spade a spade:
    Now they are shooting!

    As I write, they are not yet shootting in Crimea and in Donetsk. But
    efforts to enforce the rights of ethnic groups across international
    borders often lead to war, especially when those groups are the
    remnants of a collapsed empire.

    Vladimir Putin, Russia's stridently nationalistic president, should
    consider the parallels as he plots his next move. Putin talks a lot
    about precedent these days as he seeks to justify his infiltration
    of Russian special forces and intelligence agents to seize government
    centers in the Ukrainian region of Crimea.

    "I believe that only residents of a given country who have freedom of
    will and are in complete safety can and should determine their future,"
    Putin said last week. "If this right was granted to the Albanians in
    Kosovo, if this was made possible in many different parts of the world,
    then nobody has ruled out the right of nations to self-determination."

    No one, of course, is fooled by this. Indeed, when compared with the
    1999 NATO intervention in Kosovo, the Russians today are playing
    the Serbian card. At issue in Kosovo, then an autonomous province
    of Serbia, was the protection of an ethnic Albanian majority from a
    larger power using violence. That is, a larger power using a "lost
    tribe" -- in that case, ethnic Serbs -- as an excuse to occupy and
    repress another ethnic group. And this is precisely what Russia has
    in mind in Ukraine.

    If Putin wants to consider the potential consequences of his current
    actions, he should first remember his stint as a KGB agent -- in
    Dresden -- a city obliterated by firebombing at the end of a world
    war started in the name of reuniting the lost tribes of Germany.

    Putin is no Hitler. This goes without saying, but must be said
    nonetheless. But Putin's own frequent evocations of Nazis and fascists
    in his descriptions of the Ukrainians who overthrew and impeached
    pro-Moscow President Viktor Yanukovych has invited Hitler into the
    conversation.

    So -- when considering ethnic ties as a pretext for bold diplomatic
    bullying and outright military adventures -- are there actual
    similarities between Hitler and Putin?

    The dispersion of ethnic groups across multiple states in diasporas
    is not new or confined to Germany and Russia. Nor, of course, is it
    peculiar to Europe. Often, the lost-tribe argument proves a useful
    pretext for diplomatic snubs, and sometimes war.

    For example, Thailand and Malaysia dispute ownership of southern
    Thailand, where Muslim insurgents have been battling security forces
    since the 1970s. India and Pakistan have gone to war repeatedly -- in
    1947, 1965 and 1999 -- over their rival claims to rule the people of
    Kashmir. Indonesia invaded the island of East Timor in 1976 allegedly
    to free it from colonial Portuguese rule -- but truly to prevent
    Timorese independence (which it granted only reluctantly in 1999).

    Non-Russian former Soviet states have also experienced this plight. In
    the early 1990s, Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a bitter conflict over
    the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, where ethnic Armenians were resisting
    Azerbaijani rule. When Georgia's ethnic Russians in South Ossetia
    and Abkhazia declared separatist states in 1991, Georgia pushed back
    and tried to squash these attempts. But Tbilisi was unsuccessful:
    Russia rolled in with tanks and troops in 2008.

    Even in the Americas, the ghosts of plantation policies and imperial
    collapse are present. In 1836, the Republic of Texas cited protection
    of the rights of ethnic Americans -- Anglos -- as part of its reason
    for declaring independence from Mexico. More recently, British Prime
    Minister Margaret Thatcher went to war in 1982 over the "ethnic
    Britons" of the Falkland Islands.

    The Soviet empire's collapse is only the most recent example of
    ancient ethnic diasporas -- or colonial remnants -- sparking modern
    wars. Ever since the 1991 dissolution of the Soviet Union (which we are
    constantly reminded ranks as the "greatest geopolitical catastrophe"
    of the 20th century in Putin's eyes), Russia has played this card,
    arguing that when sizable Russian communities remain in former
    Soviet states, there is justification for treating these countries
    as less-than-sovereign entities.

    This hardly began with Putin. In 1990, Boris Yeltsin, his predecessor,
    ordered a Russian army led by Gen. Alexander Lebed to Moldova to
    support a separatist bid by ethnic Russians in that newly independent
    -- and largely ethnic Romanian -- country. This would become a
    harbinger of things to come in Georgia in 2008 and possibly now in
    Ukraine. At the time, the ethnic Russian (and some ethnic Ukrainian)
    citizens of Moldova declared themselves the republic of Trans-Dniester
    -- named for the river that formed the border of a region called
    Bessarabia, which, history buffs may recall, Joseph Stalin stole
    from Romania in the 1939 deal that also split Poland between Stalin
    and Hitler.

    There he is again. Nary a bad word about Stalin from the current
    Russian government, of course -- a man who, some scholars argue,
    killed even more people than the Austrian corporal, if not in such
    a spectacularly racist, efficient and megalomaniacal way. But Hitler
    stalks the current narrative in multiple ways. Here, European history
    offers a template for reassembling an imploded empire, as well as
    trade craft for stoking up public support in Russia for actions that
    might otherwise be seen as reckless.

    While Putin's motives may only pay lip service to the alleged peril
    ethnic Russians face outside the federation's borders, he has rich
    ground for sowing doubt about the motives of Ukrainian nationalists.

    In the months before Hitler turned on his Soviet ally in 1940, German
    agents expertly fomented anger and intrigue in many non-Russian
    communities within the Soviet Union, from the Baltic lands to the
    Tatars of Crimea to Ukraine.

    Few remember now the many divisions of Hitler's armies that were
    drawn from ethnic groups in conquered territories and even neutral
    states, including Ukraine. Indeed, Ukraine contributed some 80,000
    troops in three divisions to the German Wehrmacht, including one
    division of the Waffen SS. Ukrainians were hardly alone. Germany
    fielded divisions manned by Georgians, Armenians, Finns, the Vichy
    French and even the neutral Swedes during the war. And Russia itself
    was not immune: Ten full divisions of anti-communist White Russian
    emigres joined Hitler's army -- some 250,000 officers and Russian
    elite styling themselves as the "Russian Liberation Army" under the
    czarist general Andrey Andreyevich Vlasov.

    Ukrainians and others also fought Russian partisans alongside German
    units and served as guards in Hitler's death camps -- John Demjanjuk,
    the former U.S. autoworker from Cleveland whose prosecution on
    war crimes made headlines in 1993, was one of them. But Ukrainian
    nationalists -- and their cohorts in Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia,
    Georgia and countless other places duped by Hitler into siding with
    the western "liberators" -- had been murdered and starved to death in
    the millions by Stalin's communist tyranny in the 1930s. What might
    have seemed as a lesser of two evils may, in retrospect, have been
    a greater evil -- or at least a commensurate one.

    Nonetheless, for Russians, the word "fascist" has very real and
    profoundly divisive emotional consequences. The shame of non-Russian
    nationalists at the sins of their grandparents remains fertile today.

    The sins of Stalin, however, have been downplayed repeatedly,
    particularly since Yeltsin's brand of romantic Slavic nationalism
    gave way to Putin's Soviet nostalgia and all its big-power trappings.

    For all his citations of Western-led interventions in Libya and
    Kosovo as precedents for Russia's actions, Putin must understand
    that he is stirring a very dangerous pot. Russia has land borders
    with 14 countries -- more states than any other nation on Earth
    other than China (which also borders 14, including Russia). Many
    of those neighboring states contain large populations of people who
    self-identify as Russians. But Russia itself also contains millions
    of ethnic Koreans, Mongols, Uighurs and others whose crowded,
    resource-starved motherlands may someday have their own designs on
    reincorporating their lost tribes.

    In the Russian Far East, this dynamic is palpable, and it is common to
    hear Russians in Vladivostok and Khabarovsk complain about the influx
    of Korean and Chinese money, along with immigrant workers. Some 80
    million Chinese and 45 million Koreans live in the provinces that
    border Russia. The population of Russia's own Far Eastern territory,
    Primorsky Krai, is below 2 million.

    All that land, all that oil -- and lost tribes, to boot. Putin should
    be worried less about the precedents he cites and more about those
    he sets.

    Michael Moran is author of The Reckoning: Debt, Democracy and the
    Future of American Power. He was an editor at Radio Free Europe/Radio
    Liberty in Munich from 1990 to 1993.

    http://www.vnews.com/opinion/columns/11030792-95/column-putin-seeks-to-reclaim-russias-lost-tribes

Working...
X