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CEPA | 09Jan2018 | Janusz Bugajski
http://cepa.org/EuropesEdge/War-in-Ukraine
War in Ukraine: A struggle over Russia’s identity
As the Russia-Ukraine war enters its fifth year,
two recently published books illuminate the fundamental motives for
Moscow’s ongoing offensive. They make a compelling case that the armed
conflict is intended to demonstrate and perpetuate Russia’s dominance
through the usurpation of Ukraine’s history, territory, and identity.
[W.Z.: This article and the two books quoted therein reinforces my contention that prior to the official dissolution of the Soviet Union
on 26Dec1991 the Russian nation state did not exist. Moscow (Moskva) is
reputed to have first appeared in the literature in 1147 and over the
years grew to become the Grand Duchy of Moscow or "Moscovia", which was
usually referred to as Muscovy in the European world. In 1721, Muscovy
became the Russian Empire, when Czar Peter the Great declared himself
the Emperor of all the Kyivan-Rus lands, which he set out to conquer.
After the October 1917 revolution, the Russian Empire morphed into the
Russian Communist Empire, better known as the Soviet Union, which
collapsed in 1991. This led to the independence of 15 republics,
including Ukraine and the Russian Federation. Within the Russian
Federation, the lands of Muscovy roughly correspond to the former RSFSR
(Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic). There are hundreds(?)
of other fledgling nation states within the Russian Federation striving
to gain greater independence.]
In a masterful dissection of Russian history (Lost Kingdom: The Quest
for Empire and the Making of the Russian Nation, 2017) Harvard
professor Serhii Plokhy focuses on the sources of identity adopted by
Russia’s rulers since the Principality of Moscow launched its drive for
territorial expansion in the 15th century.
Plokhy asserts that Russia’s “myth of origin” was the medieval state of
Kyivan Rus -- a multi-Slavic kingdom centered in modern-day Ukraine and
established 200 years before Moscow appeared as a small town located in
an outlying province. The Rus were a Norse tribe that founded the
ruling Rurik dynasty in Kyiv, but the “Rus” name was subsequently
appropriated by Moscow in one of the earliest recorded examples of
identity theft. Muscovite rulers feigned descent from the Ruriks and
claimed Kyiv as the birthplace of the Russian monarchy, state, and
church. This fraudulent history became the legitimizing narrative for
Russian tsars when the small autocratic Muscovite polity began its
imperial adventure in the 15th century.
Moscow’s earliest propagandists depicted the three developing East
Slavic nations (Belarusian, Russian, and Ukrainian) as “tribes” of one
Russian nation. Moscow’s rulers consolidated their claims to dominate
all Eastern Slavs by declaring Russia as the “Third Rome” or successor
to Christian Byzantium, which was extinguished by the Muslim Turks in
the 15th century. For the next 400 years, Muscovy annexed its
neighbors’ territories and prevented the emergence of other East Slavic
states. Its Russification campaign was crafted to eradicate the
distinct identities and languages of neighboring Slavic peoples,
particularly the Ukrainians, who had a more direct claim to Kyivan Rus.
Taras Kuzio (Putin's War Against Ukraine: Revolution, Nationalism, and
Crime, 2017), is a fellow at the Center for Transatlantic Relations at
Johns Hopkins University. He provides a remarkably detailed assessment
of the Kremlin’s current attempt to destroy Ukraine’s statehood. He
contends that the root cause of the Russia-Ukraine war revolves around
Moscow’s unwillingness to recognize Ukrainians as a distinct nation.
For Moscow elites, Ukrainians and Belarusians are branches of a single
Russian nation and their statehood cannot exist outside Russia’s “zone
of privileged interests.”
The Kremlin cultivated President Viktor Yanukovych as a pro-Moscow
satrap, and if not for the Euromaidan Revolution -- which lasted from
November 2013 to February 2014 -- his regime may have succeeded. Hence,
the verbal venom in official attacks on an independent Ukraine, in
which opponents of Russia’s overlordship are denounced as “fascists”
and Western puppets. After seizing Crimea, Moscow manufactured a
rebellion in Ukraine’s Donbas region to weaken Kyiv and convince
international mediators to incorporate rebel held territories in a
“federated” structure. The objective was to block Ukraine’s ambitions
to join pan-European institutions and to revive Russia’s regional
dominance.
Moscow continues to fuel the war in Donbas with weapons and fighters to
consolidate the separatist strongholds and cripple the Ukrainian state.
Since 2014, at least 30,000 people have perished in the conflict, about
a third of them civilians, and millions have been displaced from their
homes. Washington finally decided to provide Ukraine with defensive
weapons, including anti-tank missiles, to help protect the country
against Moscow’s assault. Given Russia’s history, the Kremlin is only
likely to withdraw from Ukraine if it faces major resistance and
substantial losses. Even then, the withdrawal could be temporary unless
Ukraine builds up its military and eventually enters NATO to ensure its
long-term security.
Paradoxically, Russia’s attack on Ukraine has had the reverse
geopolitical effect of the one intended. It has significantly
strengthened the determination of Ukrainians to resist Moscow’s
political manipulation and military challenges. And above all, it has
helped consolidate Ukrainian identity and statehood despite Russia’s
historical and ideological deceptions.
Zbigniew Brzezinski famously asserted that Russia cannot simultaneously
be an empire and a democracy, and if it seeks to control Ukraine it
will remain an imperial state. For Russian ideologists, the existence
of Ukraine negates the mythological constructs in Russia’s history,
identity, and imperial statehood. Hence, the Kremlin not only seeks to
obstruct Ukraine from joining Western institutions but it also
saturates the information sphere with claims that Ukraine is an
“artificial” country. At the core of this disinformation offensive is
the fear among Kremlin officials that Ukraine will be perceived as a
more legitimate state than Russia, both historically and currently.
Russia itself is approaching a crossroads. It can either evolve into a
genuine federation or fracture into a dozen or more countries, as its
diverse regions struggle for political and economic emancipation. And
to be internationally respected and coexist with its neighbors, Moscow
needs to disavow its imperial pretensions and historical inventions. To
be authentic and durable, Russian identity cannot depend on the denial
of Ukraine’s nationhood, statehood, or independence.