Time to face it : Putin has destroyed the Russian Federation. "With centrifugal pressures fueled by economic distress" ,empires break up
This is way beyond the geo political conundrum of the Ottoman Empire when it was the "sick man of Europe"
We have a rotting imperialism, with 10,000 + nuclear warheads. This has got to go
Kissinger, in a U turn has backed NATO membership of Ukraine, to ward off Russia. We can step beyond this by getting the nexus of Russian imperialism destroyed. Go one step further
quote
The so what of potential collapse of the Russian Federation is only beginning to be debated publicly. Urging Western nations to get ready is Professor?Alexander Motyl , who argues it is time to prepare for Russia’s collapse and that not planning for the possibility of disintegration shows a dangerous lack of imagination. Centuries of imperial conquest of non-Russian ethnicities, means disintegration of centralized control and breakup of the federation deserves more attention. Very few managed to imagine the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Political units comprising the Russian Federation, including Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, Chechnya, Dagestan, and Sakha, may opt for self-rule. If the Russian Federation does not disintegrate, it is likely to become a client state of China. Working for disintegration are structural forces; Putin’s brittle and ineffective hyper-centralized political system; Putin’s personality cult as he faces defeat and visible aging; the gross mismanagement of the petro-state economy; the corruption; and the vast ethnic and regional cleavages in the last empire, argues Motyl (2023). The potential collapse of the Russian Federation carry risks as well as opportunities.
Recognizing benefits of the Russian federations disintegration is Janusz Bugajski, who also argues preparedness for the impending collapse. Bugajski sees the Russian Federation as a failed state, unable to transform itself into a nation-state or even a stable imperial state. The rupture of the Russian Federation, a federation in name only, is the imperial collapse following the disintegration the Soviet bloc and the Soviet Union. This rupture is driven by elite power struggles and intensifying rivalries between the central government and disaffected regions. With centrifugal pressures fueled by economic distress and regional resentments, empires tend to collapse when they overreach. Controlling their own resources is more in the interest of the regions than sending their people to die for Moscow’s Empire, argues Bugajski (2023).
end of quote
This is it. i.e why Putin's empire will be kaput
quote
With centrifugal pressures fueled by economic distress and regional resentments, empires tend to collapse when they overreach. Controlling their own resources is more in the interest of the regions than sending their people to die for Moscow’s Empire, argues Bugajski (2023).
end of quote
I.e. there is NO economic rationale for preserving Russian imperialism. A non imperialistic Russian Federation is fine, provided that there is defacto self rule of its contingent parts
Unfortunately the entire history of Russia from the 16th century on is of tyrannical suppression of hundreds of would be nation statelets and either the oppression ends NOW, or there is no geo political, economic, or cultural value in extension of this monstrosity,. Change one way or another is necessary
quote
Thinking beyond the Russian Federation
Av?Fredric Westerdahl |23 jan 2023|Kategorier:?Defence and Security ,?F?rsvar och s?kerhet
The invasion war against Ukraine by the Russian Federation spells the death throes of Moscow’s imperialism. The potential collapse of the Russian Federation is something the Atlantic Council’s survey of global strategists and foresight practitioners’ points to among the potentially biggest drivers of change over the next ten years. The Kremlin’s war against Ukraine could precipitate huge upheaval. Forty (40) percent of the survey’s respondents expect Russia to break up internally (Aylward et al. 2023). What could such a break-up result in?
Civil war is one risk.?Marlene Laruelle , director of the Institute for European, Russian, and Eurasian studies, raise the question: Could Russia splinter? Cohesiveness is elusive in the world’s largest state by landmass, spanning 11 time zones. Twenty percent of its population belong to local Indigenous nations. Moscow is the third most prosperous city in the world and divisions are huge. The unraveling of this fragile multiethnic state could lead to more violence where a “collapse would generate several civil wars” and Moscow elites “would react with violence to any secessionism”, argues Laurelle (2022).
The so what of potential collapse of the Russian Federation is only beginning to be debated publicly. Urging Western nations to get ready is Professor?Alexander Motyl , who argues it is time to prepare for Russia’s collapse and that not planning for the possibility of disintegration shows a dangerous lack of imagination. Centuries of imperial conquest of non-Russian ethnicities, means disintegration of centralized control and breakup of the federation deserves more attention. Very few managed to imagine the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Political units comprising the Russian Federation, including Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, Chechnya, Dagestan, and Sakha, may opt for self-rule. If the Russian Federation does not disintegrate, it is likely to become a client state of China. Working for disintegration are structural forces; Putin’s brittle and ineffective hyper-centralized political system; Putin’s personality cult as he faces defeat and visible aging; the gross mismanagement of the petro-state economy; the corruption; and the vast ethnic and regional cleavages in the last empire, argues Motyl (2023). The potential collapse of the Russian Federation carry risks as well as opportunities.
Recognizing benefits of the Russian federations disintegration is Janusz Bugajski, who also argues preparedness for the impending collapse. Bugajski sees the Russian Federation as a failed state, unable to transform itself into a nation-state or even a stable imperial state. The rupture of the Russian Federation, a federation in name only, is the imperial collapse following the disintegration the Soviet bloc and the Soviet Union. This rupture is driven by elite power struggles and intensifying rivalries between the central government and disaffected regions. With centrifugal pressures fueled by economic distress and regional resentments, empires tend to collapse when they overreach. Controlling their own resources is more in the interest of the regions than sending their people to die for Moscow’s Empire, argues Bugajski (2023).
A potential collapse of the Russian Federation, as discussed by the authors referenced above, relate to disaffected parts of the federation opting for independent self-rule. Such a break-up have potential to be violent with considerable loss of lives.
There is no natural law stating that there must be a vast Russian empire. Things change. In the past, the Tsar’s Russian Empire once bordered both the Habsburg Austro-Hungarian Empire and the Ottoman Empire. These two old empires disintegrated in 1918 after losing their last war. In comparisons, neither the Ottoman or Austrian empires were as geographically vast as the Russian federation, but they were even more ethnically diverse. One of these imperial disintegrations resulted in considerably greater loss of lives than the other did. Nowadays, several states co-exist on the former territories of these old empires. At a point when conditions made gaining independence possible, people living there took the risks to achieve that. Democracy has grown strong in many of the new independent states that arose. By now, several such states are members of the European Union. People governing themselves without the yoke of a huge empire, may find happiness and prosperity more accessible to them.
All but one of the colonial empires that existed in the 19th?century have dissolved by now. History tells us that no empire lasts forever. For many cities and peoples, the Moscow yoke once replaced the Mongol yoke. Repression and lack of independence has lasted long for many, but is not ordained to be eternal. Independence is not unheard of in Russian-speaking cities. Briefly described below are fifteen (15) cities who have all previously enjoyed independence at some point in the past and by now have between 400.000 to 5.5 million people living in each of them. To analyze the possibilities of the Russian federation disintegrating, knowledge about the past of some of the cities inside the federation can be useful. The cities’ locations arrange this brief description from the east to the west.
Where independence once reigned, independence can be regained. The cities described above represent a culturally rich past of local independence, before the imperial expansion of Moscow at their expense. It appears unfounded to exclude any possibilities that people of once independent parts could consider gaining independence from Moscow. Based on the existence of past independence, I conclude that for people living in these cities independent self-rule can become an option for them to reach for.
领英推荐
How to counter the imperialistic aggression-war of the Russian Federation constitutes today’s most immediate issue for democracies. How to address a collapse of the Russian Federation and its consequences is an issue that deserves adequate thought in advance. This read has aimed to provide some food for such thought.
Beyond empires, there is hope for people. Freedom does however seldom come without considerable cost. I recommend wholehearted support to the defense of Ukraine. The freedom of the people of Ukraine depends on them getting the right tools to finish the fight and evict the invaders. The freedom of many other people may depend on such a victory for democracy and human rights. When the dark Vertical of Moscow fades, the brightness of hope is on the Horizon.
The author is Lieutenant Colonel and a PhD student at the Swedish Defence College. He holds a master’s degree from the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College and a master’s degree in history.
References:
Aylward, Mary Kate, Peter Engelke, Uri Friedman, and Paul Kielstra. 2023. “Welcome to 2033: What the World Could Look like in Ten Years, According to More than 160 Experts – Atlantic Council.” 2023. https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/content-series/atlantic-council-strategy-paper-series/welcome-to-2033/.
Bugajski, Janusz. 2023. “The Benefits of Russia’s Coming Disintegration.”?POLITICO?(blog). January 12, 2023. https://www.politico.eu/article/opinion-russia-benefits-disintegration/.
Laruelle, Marlene. 2022. “Putin’s War and the Dangers of Russian Disintegration.”?Foreign Affairs, December 20, 2022. https://www.foreignaffairs.com/russian-federation/putins-war-and-dangers-russian-disintegration.
Motyl, Alexander J. 2023. “It’s High Time to Prepare for Russia’s Collapse.” January 7, 2023. https://foreignpolicy.com/2023/01/07/russia-ukraine-putin-collapse-disintegration-civil-war-empire/.
www.maps-of-europe.net. 2023. “Maps of Russia with Cities and Regions.” January 13, 2023. https://www.maps-of-europe.net/maps-of-russia/.
Mer av samma skribent
Dela artikeln – v?lj plattform!
Mest nedladdat
end of quote
Andrew Beckwith, PhD