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regular-article-logo Friday, 17 May 2024

It’s 1939, once again

Dmitry Medvedev also often sounds crazy: since the beginning of the conflict, Medvedev has been the main source of Russian threats of nuclear war if things don’t go well for Moscow in Ukraine

Gwynne Dyer Published 01.05.24, 07:34 AM
Vladimir Putin

Vladimir Putin File Photo

There are plenty of crazies in Russian politics who make bizarre claims about their country’s victim status (“the evil West made us do it”) and issue blood-curdling, but implausible, threats about using nuclear weapons on their enemies. But the really dangerous ones are quite sane.

In that crazy group are men like Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church. Last month he declared that the Russian invasion of Ukraine is “a Holy War, in which Russia and its people, are defending the single spiritual space of Holy Russia... are protecting the world from the onslaught of globalism and the victory of the West, which has fallen into Satanism.”

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Dmitry Medvedev, Vlad­imir Putin’s most trusted and longest-serving crony, also often sounds crazy: since the beginning of the conflict, Medvedev has been the main source of Russian threats of nuclear war if things don’t go well for Moscow in Ukraine. (He is currently the deputy chairman of the Russian Security Council, which controls the war at the strategic level.)

In February, Medvedev warned that the Western alliance must not let Ukraine try to take back its Russian-occupied territories, since “attempts to return Russia to the borders of 1991 will lead to ... a global war with Western countries using the entire strategic (nuclear) arsenal of our state ... on Kyiv, Berlin, London, Washington.”

And just in case the forces of Satan thought Russia was bluffing, Medvedev asked himself the key question: “Will we have the courage to do this if the disappearance of a thousand-year-old country, our great Motherland, is at stake, and the sacrifices made by the people of Russia over the centuries will be in vain?” He replied: “The answer is obvious.”

There is a huge logical leap between the actual outcome Medvedev is trying to prevent (‘return Russia to the borders of 1991’) and the alleged consequences of having to give back the conquered Ukrainian lands (‘the disappearance of ... our great Motherland’). He was clearly aware that he had to bridge that gap with rhetoric. He is therefore really sane.

Sane is worse, because it means that the regime’s leading figures and their propagandists have accepted that its survival (deliberately conflated with the survival of the Russian State and people) now depends on destroying the basic rule that has kept the great powers more or less at peace with one another for the past 79 years.

That rule says that henceforward borders may not be changed by force. Conquest used to be legal and was the motive for most of the wars in history. But the new rule was written into the United Nations Charter in 1945, and, subsequently, made even more explicit in the Final Act of the Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe in 1975. (Both were signed by Moscow).

It’s not the crazies we have to worry about. It’s the coldly rational nationalists like Medvedev and the chief propagandist, Vladimir Solovyov, who now argues that the great project of extending Russia’s borders to include all lands and peoples that Moscow defines as ‘Russian’ requires the destruction of this basic rule.

Solovyov, a ‘journalist’ who serves as a trusted mouthpiece for Putin’s regime, is now pointing out in his talk show on TV that “[b]orders have always been violated. That's the historical reality. All sorts of accidental formations incapable of their own statehood may not survive this era,” he says. “By that, I mean the Baltic states and all of Europe. I don't think that the European borders in their current configuration will continue to exist much longer.”

Solovyov is not stupid. He understands the parallel between Hitler’s mistaken belief that Britain and France would not respond to his invasion of Poland in 1939 and Putin’s blunder in believing that NATO would not oppose his invasion of Ukraine in 2022. But he defends it anyway.

This kind of talk would not happen on Russian television if the Kremlin didn’t want it to. Unfortunately, if the concept of inviolable borders is scrapped, especially when the great powers are involved, then we are heading straight back to 1939.

Gwynne Dyer’s new book is Intervention Earth

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