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  • Russian Russia, not Soviet Russia

    The Times, UK
    June 3 2006

    Russian Russia, not Soviet Russia
    review by Simon Sebag Montefiore



    RULERS AND VICTIMS: The Russians in the Soviet Union
    by Geoffrey Hosking
    Belknap Press, £22.95; 436pp

    RUSSIA, WHETHER under Putin, Stalin or Peter the Great, has always
    been almost impossible to fit into the usual categories of nationhood
    and empire. The USSR was often called `Soviet Russia' and in many
    ways became a Russian Empire with the Russians the `older brother' of
    its peoples - yet Russians were often its chief victims.

    By the time of Soviet senescence, it was the Russians who took
    greatest pride in its creaky glories. But on its downfall in 1991, it
    was the Russians, under President Yeltsin of the Russian Federation,
    who destroyed President Gorbachev's USSR, the source of their
    greatest pride. As Geoffrey Hosking tells it: `the Russians destroyed
    the Soviet Union not because they wished to, but because of the logic
    of their republic 's position in the country's institutional
    structure'.

    The Russians, Hosking believes, are, apart from the Jews, the world's
    most messianic people. `Most European nations have gone through at
    least one period in their history when they assumed their religion,
    civilisation or political system was especially beneficial and ought
    to be spread to the whole of humanity,' he writes. But the ruling
    nation was often `subordinated to the supranational idea' - so Spain
    was bankrupted by the Catholic mission of the Spanish Empire. Often
    such empires are linked to a crown/class-system that weakens until
    the whole edifice collapses.

    In Russia's case, the Tsar-Emperors propagated the Orthodox mission
    of Muscovite Third Rome. Hosking compares its mission to the
    Caliphate of the Ottoman Padishahs. In both, by the 20th century,
    monarchy was an empty husk, shorn of sanctity. Both fell almost
    simultaneously, but while the Turks lost their empire the Russians
    regained theirs, even increased it.

    There were two reasons for this - the Bolshevik state was capable of
    extraordinary levels of military-economic mobilisation allowing it to
    reconquer the empire. The second is that there are two strains of
    messianic mission in Russian culture - the Orthodox and the
    socialistic. When Tsardom fell, `the vacuum was filled by Russian
    messianic socialism'.

    At the heart of Lenin's Bolshevik state was the pragmatic
    multi-ethnic structure that he and Stalin had envisioned in Cracow in
    1912-13: it cleverly promised autonomy with the right of secession to
    the many nationalities in the `prison of nations' but it was a right
    that would never need to be exercised. On seizing power in 1917, they
    had no choice but to release Poland and the Baltic States, and they
    let Finland go .

    But when they had the chance in 1921 they reconquered Georgia,
    Armenia and Azerbaijan, then the Baltics in 1940 and, ultimately,
    Eastern Europe, with Poland, in 1945.

    When Lenin and his People's Commissar of Nationalities constructed
    the USSR, Russia received no central committee of its own while
    Ukrainians, Belarussians and Kazakhs, among others, were promoted,
    given the trappings of statehood and encouraged to teach their
    languages. Until the 1930s, the USSR was prejudiced against Russians.
    Lenin loathed what he called `great Russian chauvinism' .

    The Jewish part in the Soviet nightmare has to be faced, but I think
    that it can be exaggerated. Hosking argues that the original Soviet
    project was a Russian-Jewish creation and certainly in August 1917
    six of the 21 central committee members and in 1936 six of the 20
    people's commissars were Jewish. Yes, Trotsky, Zinoviev and Sverdlov
    were Jewish but I think a case can be made for the Caucasian
    influence on the Revolution: the Georgians and Armenians had a hugely
    disproportionate influence on the Bolshevik state. The Caucasian
    culture of clans, loyalty and violence made them more effective and
    influential than the Jews - although this has hardly been studied.

    During the 1930s, Stalin started to change the nature of the Soviet
    Union. Historians used to claim that the Georgian suddenly became
    Russian and adopted Russian nationalism but Hosking is much too
    sophisticated to repeat this cliché. Stalin did cull the Jews and
    internationalists in the leadership, but men such as Kaganovich and
    Mekhlis remained in high positions.

    Stalin started to promote pride in Russian history but he thought
    hard and created Soviet nationalism, the idea that a Soviet person
    may or may not be Russian but co-opted both messianic socialism and
    Russian nationalism/imperialism.

    The Second World War changed this again: Stalin saw it as a Russian
    victory so he tweaked his Soviet patriotic idea to promote the
    Russians as `first among equals'.

    The strange complexity of Soviet Russianness is best glimpsed by
    looking at Stalin himself: the dictator existed as a man of at least
    four `nationalities' - he never ceased seeing himself as a Georgian,
    he spoke it, ate it, holidayed there, read its literature; secondly,
    he was a fanatical Marxist internationalist; thirdly he was a
    Russian, indeed a tsar - the successor to Ivan the Terrible and Peter
    the Great - and above all, he was the Soviet father of peoples, a
    Soviet patriot.

    No one understood the dangerous fragility of this complex structure
    better than him, in the 1949 Leningrad Case, Stalin learnt that two
    of his top grandees, Voznescensky and Kuznetzov, both Leningraders
    and Russians, were promoting a Russian capital in Leningrad (leaving
    the Soviet one in Moscow), with the creation of a separate Russian
    Communist Party. Stalin knew this would destroy his own power as a
    non-Russian and would tear asunder the USSR.

    He reacted by brutally killing these close associates. He foresaw
    exactly what happened in 1991 when the Russian Federation destroyed
    the USSR.

    After Stalin, the USSR was sustained by its obsessive pride in
    Glorious October 1917 and Victorious 1945, which restored Russian
    national morale, its international Communist role and its real
    mission - rivalry with America. By the 1960s, the USSR was `in a real
    sense Russian' but in this backward-looking way.

    Hosking's analysis of the failure of the internal Soviet state is
    peerless: `Though the Soviet state assumed and performed many
    functions of a modern state, it did so without creating a political
    community. Its conduits of power were largely directed from above
    through personal channels. The trust of ordinary people was in
    patron-client hierarchies' - not laws or institutions.

    Hosking has always been a deeply thoughtful historian. Here he
    delivers a beautifully written, profound and brilliant analysis not
    just of the USSR but of Russianness itself: anyone who wants to
    understand Russia today or who wonders why the Russians are special
    should read this outstanding, sensitive book.

    He concludes: `Most Russians agree the disintegration of the USSR was
    a disaster, not because they are inveterate Stalinists, but because
    it was `their' country. They are now building a nation state few of
    them wished for. They have no choice though.'
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