pram, 1:10 PM Puti’s Speech on Russia and Ukraine Was a Confused, Ulvanationast History
ANALYSIS
Putin’s Speech Laid Out a Dark Vis!
Russian History
There's no room for Ukraine in the Russian leader's distorted telling of the past.
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By Kristaps Andrejsons, a journalist in Latvia and the creator of The Eastern Border podcast.
FEBRUARY 22, 2022, 323 PM
Over his many years as the leader of Russia, President Vladimir Putin has
dedicated a lot of time and effort to controlling history. The Kremlin works
hard to ensure Putin’s constructed worldview, in which Russian greatness is
derived from the country’s past glory and suffering, is taught in schools and
shown in all media and academic discourse as reality. A shocking and
important example of this was the closing late last year of the Memorial human
rights organization, which investigated Soviet repression, with the prosecution
claiming that Memorial “creates a false image of the USSR as a terrorist state
and denigrates the memory of World War II.”
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It was no surprise, then, that the first part of Putin’s major televised speech on
Monday was full of historical grievance. It was a messy, incoherent, angry rant
that is difficult to make sense of but that put forward a dark vision of renewed
national glory. Putin’s mix of half-truths, fantasies, and lies of omission rightly
has neighboring states, once victims of Russian imperialism themselves, highly
worried.
Ukraine was Putin’s chief target. He began by talking about the special place
Ukraine has in Russian history, culture, and religion, and then made his first
big historical claim: “Since time immemorial, the people living in the
southwest of what has historically been Russian land have called themselves
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Russians and Orthodox Christians. This was the case before the 17th century,
when a portion of this territory rejoined the Russian state, and after.”
This is a deliberately confused statement: The identity of Kievan Rus, the
historical kingdom that converted to Orthodoxy not in “time immemorial” but
in the 10th century, is equated with the Moscow-centered Tsardom of Russia
that emerged in the 16th century. To his audience, though, all these “Russians”
are the same. It's all Russia—and always has been.
Then came a piece of confusing nonsense. Putin claimed that modern Ukraine
was created by the Russian communists and that Vladimir Lenin and his
associates started this process right after the 1917 revolution in a brutal way, by
dividing Russian lands, He specifically added: “Nobody asked the millions of
people living there what they thought.”
Presumably he’s referencing the 1919 creation of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist
Republic—one of the constituent states of the Soviet Union. But Ukrainian
identity and nationalism long preceded that, and Lenin’s vision of Soviet
control had no space for genuine Ukrainian independence, which was crushed
brutally by the Soviets, Putin’s claim bears very little resemblance to reality,
but it’s a nice simple narrative—and a sop to his anti-communist supporters.
Everything was Russia, and then Lenin divided it.
Putin then talked about how Stalin handed lands taken from Poland to
Ukraine, along with Romanian and Hungarian territory. Stalin is the good
communist in this narrative, the wise Russian father handing out land to his
graceful subjects. There’s no room for the complications of Stalin’s crimes or
complicity with the Nazis in invading Poland in 1939—indeed, raise those
issues in modern Russia and you may be falsely accused of pedophilia and left
to die in prison, like 67-year-old historian Sergei Koltyrin.
Putin followed this remark up with the following statement: “And in 1954,
[then-Soviet leader Nikita] Khrushchev took Crimea away from Russia for some
reason and also gave it to Ukraine. In effect, this is how the territory of modern
Ukraine was formed.” By not mentioning the reason here, Putin portrays
Khrushchev—himself a Ukrainian—as a simpleton compared to Stalin. (Stalin
was Georgian, but he was an enthusiastic Russian nationalist nevertheless,
much like the Austrian Adolf Hitler was about Germany.)
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Yet diving into the likely reason for the transfer unveils another reason Putin
didn’t mention it. The traditional Soviet explanations for the move, published
in 1954, are about the nobility and generosity of the Russian people. But there’s
another reason I find more convincing: Khrushchev was well aware of the
largest issue in Crimea, lack of drinking water, and figured it would be handled
better administratively through a north Crimean channel that would support
the peninsula with water from Ukraine. And since they were all one Soviet
Union, why not package it up as a gift?
But that’s an embarrassing bit of history for Russia right now, because eight
years after its invasion, it still hasn’t solved the drinking water issue itself.
Crimea still has regular water rationing. And that’s only one of many problems
that have come alongside annexation, from collapsing bridges to massive
economic costs.
Putin then returned in his speech to the October Revolution of 1917 and the
subsequent arguments between Stalin and Lenin about how the USSR should
be formed. Again, in his version of history, Stalin is the good guy. Stalin
suggested building the country on the principles of limited autonomy within a
national framework—that is, giving the republics broad powers upon joining a
unified state. Putin argued that Lenin criticized this plan and suggested
making concessions to the nationalists. He summarized that Lenin’s ideas
amounted to, in essence, a confederative state arrangement and a slogan about
the right of nations to self-determination.
This view won out in the end, but Putin is critical and raised questions about
this choice of a government form and why the rights of secession—which the
nations used to break away in 1991—were even included in the Soviet
Constitution. Putin said Ukraine might as well have been named after Lenin
himself. He ended this part with a clearly open threat: “You want
decommunization? Well then, that works for us! But don’t stop halfway! We're
ready to show what a true decommunization would mean for Ukraine!” In this
version of history, Ukraine only exists because of communism—and so
decommunization means the end of Ukraine.
When stagnation hit, Putin argued, it was this “dangerous infectant” together
with internal struggles for power that led to the end of the USSR—and with the
Communist Party’s inability to find “real solutions,” the point of no return
arrived in September 1989 with the Soviet Communist Party Central
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sepram, 1:10 PM Puti’s Speech on Russia and Ukraine Was a Confused, Ulvanationast History
Committee’s plenary session. Putin openly hates the decision that was made
there—to adopt the Communist Party’s platform, returning to more
autonomous republics and give the republics more rights—as, in his view, it
was the leading Communists’ inability to do more radical, centralized things by
the perestroika era that really was the seed of the collapse.
From all this, Putin’s vision of history is clear—if viciously wrong. A great
Russia once existed, of which Ukraine was but a part. The bad communists, like
Lenin and Khrushchev and their successor Mikhail Gorbachev, divided up that
great Russia in an artificial way, creating divisions where none existed before.
Implicit in this is that Ukrainians who say differently are deluded or
manipulated by others. Now, that natural vision has to be restored by a strong
leader, walking in the footsteps of Stalin.
The things that are left out of Putin’s version are too numerous to recount, from
tsarist oppression to the Holodomor, when Ukrainians were starved by Soviet
policy, to the very existence of the Baltic states. As so often with nationalists,
Russia is simultaneously powerful and a victim in this, mighty but constantly
sinned against and targeted by others.
But that’s the point. This is a simple version of history, put forward by a
strongman determined to transform it into a simple version of the future: one
in which all so-called Russians, including Ukrainians, bow before the might of
the empire—and the emperor.
Kristaps Andrejsons is a journalist in Latvia and the creator of The Eastern Border podcast on the USSR and.
iropean politics. He is also a PhD candidate in communications science.
TAGS: HISTORY, RUSSIA, WAR
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