#29 - JRL 2007-103 - JRL Home
RIA Novosti
May 4, 2007
Ukraine is not a historical joke
MOSCOW. (Gennady Bordyugov for RIA Novosti) - Sooner or later, the crisis in
Ukraine will be overcome. But standing behind the trivial election blocs, two or
three party marches of the confronting sides, and the inevitable question of the
power structure (upheavals have been programmed into the current one) is the
Ukrainian issue, the destiny of Ukraine as a state.
A country may even be split if some party goes for victory at whatever the
cost.
The past century was a cradle for many national states although for the then
advocates of globalism or, to be more precise, global revolution this notion was
devoid of any sense. History repeats itself in the 21st century even if someone
believes that the world is ruled by capital while some nations do not have
independent banks. The intelligentsia was the first to welcome the emergence of
post-Soviet national states and tried to become the national elite and distance
itself as much as possible from Russian (or formerly tsarist and Soviet)
statehood.
But property ownership and social policy are the overriding issues for the
other strata that initially followed the elite. Nationalist attitudes run
counter to the interests of the majority. If national parties are unable to
resolve urgent issues, it is possible to ask the West or Moscow for help and
make a choice depending on the terms offered and on condition that national
feelings are not hurt. It is clear that any infringement on interests fans up
nationalistic attitudes and provokes Ukraine-for-Ukrainians sentiments.
I believe that the main political issue in Ukraine is the choice of a
development model. Should it follow the West or choose its own road? Russia and
Belarus seem to have made their choices. Choice of one's own model is the main
test for the new statehood. Unequivocal orientation to the West or Russia is
fraught with new conflicts and may even lead to a split.
Unbiased historians know well that the act of 1654 was an alliance of two
independent partners. At worst, it was a limited-in-time Moscow protectorate but
by no means absorption of Ukraine by the Muscovite state. Kiev has unequivocally
accepted the (Russian) transitional government's recognition of the Ukrainian
parliament that proclaimed Ukraine's autonomy on June 10, 1917. The relevant
decree (called the First Universal in Ukrainian) had references to resolutions
of the Hetmanate of the 17th century, which was viewed as the Golden Age of
Ukrainian statehood.
The current crisis has again reveled Ukraine's classic division into the West
-(former Polish territories), the Russia-associated East, and the conquered
cosmopolitan South. Geographical, economic, historical and ethnic differences
predetermine the political orientation of these regions. But we must bear in
mind that since the start of the past century these regions were united by the
dominance of the Ukrainian farmer family and its institutions that did not
include communes. Farmers preserved their original culture and the Ukrainian
language, whereas the educated classes switched to Russian, which became a
language of state administration.
All regions were equally affected by tsarist modernization and
industrialization from above, huge social upheavals in the empire, revolutions
in 1905 and 1917, and wars. Even if there are deep differences between these
regions, Ukraine can still function as a unitary state. An alternative is a
split but not federalization that is so extensively discussed by Russian
political scientists and viewed as an indispensable condition for
democratization (as if there is none in Ukraine).
In order to resolve Ukraine's issue and keep it as a single country, its
eastern and western regions should opt for mutual assimilation covering economic
ties, guest workers and bilingualism. At the same time, they should give up
attempts to Ukrainize non-Ukrainians and overcome the obsolete great-power
ambitions based on the Uniate model of development based on Petlura and Bandera
ideology. Last but not the least, nobody should forget or desecrate the past, as
it happened in some areas in Ukraine when the Ukrainian SS division was
rehabilitated.
If this does not happen, Russia should get ready to deal with two Ukrainian
countries. But even in this case they would not be a historical joke because
they would deserve their independence.
Gennady Bordyugov is a member of the RIA Novosti Expert Council.
|