Zbigniew Marcin Kowalewski
In this pivotal war on a global scale, the Ukrainian nation is struggling to preserve its independence, obtained only 30 years ago, after centuries of domination and relentless Russification. It rejects the âTrinitarianâ Russian nation (Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine) imagined in the tsarist era and claimed by Vladimir Putin. The Russian ruling class is struggling for the revival of a declining Russian imperialism that, without control over Ukraine, risks disappearing from the historical scene.
In 1937, at a reception on the occasion of the twentieth anniversary of the October Revolution, Joseph Stalin toasted âto the complete destruction of all enemies, themselves and their kin!â As eyewitness Georgi Dimitrov noted in his diary, in making this toast, Stalin explained that the tsars âdid one thing that was goodâthey amassed an enormous state, all the way to Kamchatka. We have inherited that state. And for the first time, we, the Bolsheviks, have consolidated and strengthened that state as a united and indivisible state.â Therefore, âwhoever attempts to destroy that unity of the socialist state, whoever seeks the separation of any of its parts or nationalities â that man is an enemy, a sworn enemy of the state and of the peoples of the USSR. And we will destroy each and every such enemy, even if he was an old Bolshevik; we will destroy all his kin, his family. We will mercilessly destroy anyone who, by his deeds or his thoughts â yes, his thoughts â threatens the unity of the socialist state.â[1]
Historically, Russian imperialism has been based on the ideas of âamassing Russian landsâ and building a âunique and indivisibleâ Russian state. This imperialism has always been â and remains â as specific as the social formation of Russia itself has been and remained the same during the successive historical phases of its development, starting with the Tsardom of Russia (1547-1721). When Vladimir Lenin theorized âmodern capitalist imperialism,â he stressed that in Russia âcapitalist imperialism is weaker than military-feudal imperialism is.â[2] To describe the latter as feudal was an oversimplification. Probably from the middle of the sixteenth century, in the time of Ivan the Terrible, the Russian social formation was essentially a combination of two different pre-capitalist modes of exploitation. The first, feudal, was based on the fact that landowners extorted surplus labor from peasants in the form of rent. The other, tributary, was modeled on the Ottoman Empire, then the most powerful empire in the world,[3] and was based on the extraction by the state bureaucracy of the tax on the peasants.
In the Soviet Union, the Stalinist dogma of the unilinear development of humanity, with only five stages, was de rigueur. The tributary mode of exploitation had no place, especially since it could be associated (superficially, but not without reason) with the domination of the Stalinist bureaucracy. Some Soviet historians, without formally transgressing this scheme, cleverly circumvented the ban by calling it âstate feudalismâ or âeasternâ feudalism, different from âprivateâ and âWesternâ feudalism. From the middle of the seventeenth century and almost until the abolition of serfdom in 1861, the third form of exploitation â and more terrible for the peasantry â was slavery, including human trafficking, into which Russian serfdom actually degenerated.
Minimal surplus product
None of these modes of exploitation represented (contrary to supposedly Marxist discursive habits) is a mode of production, because they failed to formally and really subsume the productive forces under them, and therefore did not guarantee their sustainable and systematic development. However, it was on the basis of these modes of exploitation that the Russian state was formed. As pointed out by Ruslan Skrynnikov, one of the leading specialists in the oprichnina of Ivan the Terrible who unleashed the very first Great Terror in Russia and drowned in it, âsome of its practices contained, as if in the embryonic state, all the further development of the nobiliary and bureaucratic absolute monarchy.â[4] In fact, not only of Tsardom, but of all Russian despotic regimes up to the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
Another contemporary historian, Leonid Milov, puts forward very important theses on the peculiarities of the historical development of Russian society. Starting from the study of the natural and climatic conditions of production, he developed a key conception of âthe history of Russia as a society with minimal total surplus product.â[5] The reasons for this are that compared to other agricultural societies, central Russia had a very short agricultural season, which because of the climate lasted only from the beginning of May to the beginning of October (in Western Europe, only in December and January did peasants not work in the fields); and in addition, the land was poor in humus.
The result was that âuntil the mechanization of this type of work,â there was low fertility and, therefore, a low volume for societyâs total surplus product, which âcreated in this region, for centuries, a relatively primitive agricultural society.â Therefore, âin order to achieve a minimum result, it was necessary to concentrate the work as much as possible in a relatively short period of time. Individual peasant exploitation could not achieve the indispensable degree of concentration of labor efforts during objectively existing agricultural labor seasons,â so its fragility âhas been compensated for through most of the millennial history of the Russian state by the very great role of the peasant community.â[6]
Unity of opposites
Peasantsâ surplus labor could only be extorted â to a large extent or even entirely â at the expense of the labor necessary for its own reproduction, that is, by methods of absolute exploitation (rather than by relative exploitation based on the increase in labor productivity). This was not possible without imposing on them the harshest possible system of serfdom, especially since, given the general conditions of production, a strong communal organization of labor was necessary. The need âto optimize the size of the total surplus productâ â to increase it in the interest of the state apparatuses and the ruling class â was pressing, but âin the way to this âoptimization,â that is, the objective need to intensify the exploitation of the peasants, was based on this same peasant community, bastion of local cohesion and means of peasant resistance.â[7]
From this was born âa kind of unity of opposites: what counterbalanced the inevitable existence of the community was a counterweight in the form of the most brutal and severe variant of the personal dependence of each member of this organism.â The impossibility of overcoming this contradiction without a considerable development of the productive forces, which was not allowed by pre-capitalist relations of exploitation, meant that the role of the state consisted in âcreating a monolithic and powerful ruling class, capable of uprooting or neutralizing the defense mechanisms of the agrarian community in the process of daily exploitation of the peasantry.â Summing up, according to Milov: âThe inevitability of the existence of the community, conditioned by its productive and social functions, ended up giving life to the most severe and brutal mechanisms to squeeze out as much surplus product as possible. Hence the emergence of the serfdom regime, which was able to neutralize the community as the basis of peasant resistance. In turn, this regime of serfdom became possible only because of the development of the most despotic forms of state power â the Russian autocratic regime.â[8] This is what has united the ruling class.
Where does the periphery begin?
At the same time, however, âthe extremely extensive nature of agricultural production and the objective impossibility of intensifying it have meant that the main historical territory of the Russian state has not been able to withstand the growth in population density. Hence the constant need, for centuries, for the population to migrate to new territories in search of more fertile arable land, climatic conditions more favorable to agriculture, etc.â[9] Moreover, âmigratory processes have gone hand in hand with the strengthening of the absolutist state, ready to control and defend large areas of the country,â and thus with the establishment of huge armed forces, although âthe extremely small size of the total surplus product objectively created extremely unfavorable conditions for the formation of the so-called superstructure over the basic elements.â[10]
This centuries-old colonial, military, and secular state expansion to the south, southeast and east gradually encompassed vast areas, increasingly extensive âalienâ peripheral territories and increasingly distant neighboring countries, victims of conquest. This expansion was accompanied by several hundred years of struggle on the part of the Tsardom of Russia and then the Russian Empire (1721-1917) for access to ice-free ports on the seas to the west and east. Hence the legitimate questions that are so difficult to answer correctly: âWhen did Russian colonization begin â with the occupation of Kazan, an ethnically foreign city, or Novgorod, ethnically close?â The Novgorod Republic fell under the onslaught of the Moscow army in 1478, and the Kazan Khanate in 1552. âWhere are the borders of the Russian metropolis, where do the Russian colonies begin, and how can they be distinguished?â Because they have been so mobile, âRussiaâs borders expanded both before the rise of Tsarism and during the Tsarist era with such rapidity that the very distinction between âexternalâ and âinternalâ was fluid and indeterminate.â[11]
Military-colonial conquests
The historical formation of Russia was shaped in the process of military-colonial conquests of the Russian countryside and by peasant wars, in fact anti-colonial wars, that they provoked, accompanied by internal and external colonizations, conquests, looting, and colonial oppression of other peoples. As Alexander Etkind rightly puts it, âthe Russian Empire was a great colonial system both at its distant frontiers and in its dark heartlands.â[12] Contrary to Russian mythology, the conquest of a country as huge as Siberia did not âextend the territory of Moscow to the border with China,â but turned Siberia into a typical colony. Yet it became common to perceive Siberia as an inseparable part of Russia, as well as later Poland, Lithuania, Finland, the Caucasus, Bukhara and Tuva â among others.
Some Russian historians, making their theoretical contribution to the construction of the dominant and, as is evident today, timeless âRussian idea,â have very cleverly called this phenomenon âRussiaâs self-colonizationâ: the successive lands it seized did not become its colonies, but they âcolonized themselves,â[13] because it was boundless (and, whether openly or secretly, remained boundless in the dominant ideology). After taking left-bank Ukraine in the seventeenth century, Russiaâs participation in the partition of the Republic of the Two Nations (Poland-Lithuania) in the last decades of the eighteenth century allowed it to seize most of Ukraine on the right bank of the Dnieper â a total of 80% of Ukrainian land. This proved to be a fundamental strategic gain, reaching deeply into Europe and determining the scope and Eurasian character of the Russian Empire.
If the Russian nobility was a dominant order, the land never became entirely the private property of the nobles. This would have been contrary to the overriding interests of this imperial state, in the construction of which no social class played as important a role as itself â its apparatuses and bureaucratic personnel. It was not only the construction of a colossal army at the very cost of 25 years of peasant military service and immense military and civilian infrastructure financed by the forced labor of hundreds of thousands of other peasants, belonging both to the state and to the landowners, but also entire brigades of skilled craftspeople sent to truly forced labor in different parts of the country. Moreover, as Milov puts it, âthe state machine was forced to advance the process of social division of labor, and especially the separation of industry and agriculture,â[14] against the resistance of dominant modes of exploitation that hindered this process.
Industrial serfdom
As a result, âthe participation of the state in the creation of industry in the country contributed to a gigantic leap in the development of the productive forces, although the borrowing of âWestern technologiesâ by an archaic society in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries had a monstrous social effect: a mass of workers appeared forever attached to factories and workplaces (the so-called laborers âsubjected in perpetuityâ), and it stimulated the slide of society towards slavery.â[15] The enormous Russian military-industrial complex, the nucleus of which was the metallurgy of the Urals, was not established on the basis of the development of capitalist relations, but within the framework of feudal and tributary relations.[16]
It is true that capital flourished, but it was pre-capitalist and hindered the development of capitalism â âcommercial capital developed not deeply, not by transforming production, but broadly, by increasing the radius of its operation,â and âadvanced from the center toward the periphery, following the peasant settlers who, in search of fresh lands and freedom from imposts, were penetrating new territory.â[17]
Based on extra-economic coercion, pre-capitalist modes of exploitation dominated the capitalist mode of production in Russia until the revolution of 1917, not only in agriculture but also in industry, long after the reform of 1861.
When Russian social democracy was formed as a party, the work of about 30% of the industrial workers was still serf work, not wage labor, which this social democracy, including Leninâs and Martovâs Iskra, associating industry (i.e., the productive forces, not the relations of production) with capitalism, did not see. âEven at the beginning of the twentieth century, more than half of the industrial enterprises of the main industrial core (the steel industry) were not capitalist in the strict sense of the term,â says Mikhail Voeikov. The pre-capitalist methods of extracting the surplus product of the labor of the direct producers that still prevailed âdid not allow national capital to carry out the necessary accumulation,â which is why âforeign capital was so strong.â[18] Where capital already dominated in the Russian economy, it was almost immediately big capital and there were quickly processes of monopolization.
Multiplicity of revolutions
In Russia, therefore, âmodern capitalist imperialismâ was being born, but it was âenmeshedâ â Lenin wrote just before the 1917 revolution â âin a particularly close network of pre-capitalist relations,â so close that âin general, military and feudal imperialism is predominant in Russia.â[19] The foundation of this imperialism was âthe monopoly of military power, vast territories, or special facilities for robbing minority nationalities, China, etc.,â that is, of the non-Russian peoples within Russia itself and of the peoples of neighboring countries. At the same time, Lenin wrote, this extra-economic monopoly âpartly supplements, partly takes the place of, the monopoly of modern, up-to-date finance capital.â[20] Virtually all exegetes of Leninâs writings on imperialism do not mention this theoretical proposition, which is crucial for the study of the Russian social formation.[21]
The collapse of this entanglement of Russian âmilitary and feudalâ imperialism with capitalist imperialism was not the work of a single revolution, but of various revolutions converging and diverging, forming alliances and clashing violently. The Russian Revolution of October 1917 was one of them. At the center of the empire, it was a worker and peasant revolution; in the colonial periphery, it was based on Russian and Russified urban minorities and settlements. It had a colonizing character, as did the Russian power of the councils it established, as demonstrated by the Bolshevik Georgi Safarov in his once-classic work on the âcolonial revolutionâ in Turkestan. âMembership of the industrial proletariat of a Tsarist colony was a national privilege of the Russians. This is why, here too, the dictatorship of the proletariat has taken on a typically colonizing appearance from the very first momentsâ (emphasis in original).[22]
But among the oppressed peoples, the Russian Revolution also sparked national revolutions. The most territorially extensive, violent, dynamic, and unpredictable of these was the Ukrainian revolution. Its outburst, and even more the momentum it gained, was unexpected. A peasant nation, without âitsâ landowners and âitsâ capitalists, with a thin layer of petty bourgeoisie and intelligentsia and a forbidden language, did not seem destined or capable of a successful revolution. Since the Russian army wiped out the Zaporozhian Sich, the stronghold of the Free Cossacks, in 1775, the Ukrainian people for the first time proclaimed their independence in 1918. Formally it was done, with great popular support, in January 1918 in Kiev by the Central Rada (Council) formed by petty-bourgeois Ukrainian parties. Frightened by the proletarian revolution that had brought the Bolsheviks to power in Petrograd and Moscow, the Central Rada decided in this manner to separate Ukraine from Soviet Russia, and immediately became involved in a war with the Bolsheviks.
Ukrainian National Revolution
Some Ukrainian Bolsheviks (although the percentage of Ukrainians among the members of the Bolshevik Party in Ukraine was negligible) nevertheless also wanted a revolutionary Ukraine, a Soviet one like Russia, but independent. But above all, in the radical left, the Ukrainian Communist Party (Borotbist)âseparated from the Bolsheviks and formed by the left wing of the Ukrainian Socialist-Revolutionary Party and part of the left wing of Ukrainian Social Democracyâwanted national independence. Allied with the Bolsheviks, this party had a social base incomparably broader than theirs.
The alliance of the Borotbists with the Bolsheviks was very difficult. The head of the Bolshevik government set up after the second occupation of Kiev by the Red Army in 1919, Christian Rakovsky, coming from Bulgaria, proclaimed that âdecreeing the Ukrainian language as the state language would be a reactionary measure that no one needs,â because in general âthe Ukrainian question and Ukraine are not so much a real fact as an invention of the Ukrainian intelligentsia.â[23] He was not alone among Marxists: Rosa Luxemburg asserted that Ukrainian nationalism was a âridiculous pose,â âa mere whim, a folly of a few dozen petty-bourgeois intellectuals.â[24] Believing that âUkraine is to Russia what Ireland is to England,â that it was a colony and that its oppressed people should obtain independence, Lenin was an exception, but he said so publicly only once.[25]
In addition to the Rakovsky governmentâs policy on the national question, there was an ultra-left policy on the agrarian question, which, unlike the Bolshevik decree on land, was not aimed at the parceling out of land holdings for the benefit of the peasants, but at the transformation of these properties into collective farms. State requisitions of grain and âwar communismâ in general added fuel to the fire. All this led to a strong tide of anti-Bolshevik peasant uprisings in 1919 (there were 660, large and small), which cut Ukraine off from Hungary and prevented the Ukrainian Red Army from coming to the aid of the Hungarian Republic of Councils, when this was the latterâs only hope of survival. In Ukraine itself, these uprisings defeated totally the policy of âwar communism.â The Bolshevik authorities managed to collect only less than 9 percent of the grain that they planned to transport to Russia to feed the starving cities. Moreover, the insurgent wave paved the way for the offensive of General Anton Denikinâs White Guard troops on Moscow.[26] It is true that Rakovsky himself quickly drew serious conclusions from his governmentâs disastrous policies, but he did so only after its collapse.
Pro-independence Communists
In much of the Dnieper and south-east regions of Ukraine, the struggle against the occupation by the Russian White Guard rested on the shoulders of guerrilla and insurgent movements, led by the Communist-Borotbists, who were the strongest underground party, and by the anarcho-communists under the leadership of Nestor Makhno. After the defeat of Denikin, the Red Army, for the third time in a row, guaranteed power in Ukraine to the Bolsheviks. It was only then, in February 1920, that they decided to abandon their doctrinaire approach to the agrarian question and distribute the land to the peasants. The Borotbists were overwhelmingly in the majority among the Ukrainian Communists, and even more numerous than all the Bolsheviks then active in Ukraine, including those sent from Russia. But the Bolsheviks, much stronger with their regular army, accepted them only as very minority partners in the ruling coalition and also strongly tied their hands to limit their political independence as much as possible.
Lenin was very afraid that once the civil war and foreign intervention were over, there would be an armed uprising of the Borotbists against the Bolsheviks if the latter opposed the independence of Soviet Ukraine. He was well aware, too, that in his own party âscratch some Communist and you will find a Great-Russian chauvinist. (âŚ) He is in many of us and we have to fight him.â[27] He demanded of his comrades the âgreatest caution regarding nationalist traditions, strictest observance of equality of the Ukrainian language and culture, all officials to be required to study the Ukrainian language, and so on.â[28]
He publicly affirmed: âIt is (âŚ) self-evident and generally recognized that only the Ukrainian workers and peasants themselves can and will decide at their All-Ukraine Congress of Soviets whether Ukraine shall amalgamate with Russiaâ into a single Soviet republic, âor whether it shall remain a separate and independent republicâ united by a union (federation) with Russia, and, âin the latter case, what federal ties shall be established between that republic and Russia.â On this question, he declared, âthere should be no parting of the ways among Communists.â He did not accept a confederation. âOne of the things distinguishing the Borotbists from the Bolsheviks is that they insist upon the unconditional independence of Ukraine. The Bolsheviks will not make this a subject of difference and disunity, they do not regard this as an obstacle to concerted proletarian effortâ (emphasis in original). Because the Ukrainian nation was historically a nation oppressed by Russia, Lenin explained, âwe Great-Russian Communists must make concessions when there are differences with the Ukrainian Bolshevik and Borotbist Communists and these differences concern the state independence of Ukraine, the forms of its alliance with Russia, and the national question in general.â[29]
âA victory worth a pair of good battlesâ
However, exactly the opposite happened, with the Borobtbists having to give way to the Bolsheviks in these areas â and this under the threat of âliquidation.â Behind closed doors, Lenin postulated, âfor the time being, an independentâ Ukraine âin close federationâ with Russia and a âtemporary bloc with the Borotbistsâ together âwith the concurrent launching of a propaganda campaign for the complete mergerâ of Ukraine with Russia into a unitary state. He quickly added that âthe struggle against the slogan of union as close as possibleâ with Russia, i.e. for the national independence, is âcontrary to the interests of the proletariat,â so that in Ukraine âall politics must systematically and relentlessly aim at the liquidation of the Borotbists in the near future.â He âurge[d] that the Borotbists be accused not of nationalism, but of counter-revolutionary and petty-bourgeois tendencies.â[30]
In exactly the same period the so-called âfederalist,â in fact pro-independence, faction of the Ukrainian Bolsheviks had been informing Lenin that in Ukraine his âparty has no influence in the countryside, which is purely Ukrainian, and does nothing to attract its poorest elements, but on the other hand it admits into its ranks with open arms Russian petty-bourgeois elements and, still more, more or less Russified Jewish craftspeople. The influence of these petty-bourgeois elements in the party is very pernicious.â This is due, they explained, to the fact that âthrough the entire policy of the [Bolshevik] Communist Party in Ukraine runs like a red thread an extremely suspicious attitude towards the Ukrainian Communist groups and an orientation towards groups, although not Communist, but not infected of âseparatismâ, although these groups have no real force and are a kind of âimaginary valuesâ, like the [non-Ukrainian] Mensheviks and Left Socialist-Revolutionaries.â[31]
The âliquidationâ of Borotbists did not take place because, whether for the sake of the cause of the international socialist revolution or simply because they realized that a revolver had been put to their heads, they themselves dissolved their party.[32] As Lenin explained, âinstead of an inevitable uprising, (âŚ) all the best elements among the Borotbists have joined our Party under our control and with our consent, while the rest have disappeared from the political scene. This victory is worth a pair of good battles.â[33] Out of 15,000 Borotbists, 4,000 joined in Ukraine the 12,000 Bolsheviks. Less than two years later, after various, especially âanti-separatistâ, internal purges, only 118 of them remained in the Bolshevik party. Some for several years occupied prominent state positions in the republic. But the pro-independence Communist currents or milieux of Borotbist origin disappeared very quickly inside the Bolshevik Party.
In the light of Leninâs well known ideological struggles for the right of peoples to self-determination to the point of separation, and of his real policy in this area, the way in which he actually conceived of this right inherent in his thought remains, if not a mystery, at least something totally unexplored. Nearly all Marxist literature or that presenting itself as such devoted to his interpretation of this right has the exegetical, apologetic, or epigonic character. Marxists have buried their heads in the sand in the face of the historical fact that everywhere in the colonial peripheries of Russia where the power of his party imposed itself, or more precisely where the Red Army asserted it, this right has not been enforced and there was no way to try to enforce it without being accused of being counter-revolutionary.
Contradiction at the heart of the revolution
The revolution in Russia did not destroy Russian imperialism. With capitalism, it overthrew âmodern capitalist imperialismâ and suppressed the pre-capitalist base (feudal and tributary) of military imperialism. But it did not uproot the conditions for the reproduction of the Russian extra-economic monopoly that constituted it, the extra-economic âmonopoly of military power, vast territories, or special facilities for robbingâ the other peoples of Russiaâs inner and outer peripheries. To the extent that the revolution embraced the periphery and spread there, among the oppressed peoples, in the form of national revolutions, it forced this monopoly to retreat. At the same time, it reproduced it to the extent that it spread from the center to the periphery by means of military conquest. This contradiction, which was at the heart of the Russian Revolution, was inherent in it and impossible to resolve within its own framework. Much now depended on which side of the contradiction would prevail.
Following the collapse of the Russian Empire, Finland, Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, and Poland successively broke away from it, and following the disastrous defeat suffered in the 1920 war with Poland, Soviet Russia lost part of Ukraine (and Belarus). For the survival of Russian imperialism, it was decisive whether or not Soviet Ukraine would separate. When the Soviet Union took shape as a state body in 1922-1923, the Ukrainian Bolsheviks spoke openly of the fact that while a sharp struggle was waged against Ukrainian ânationalist survivalsâ among Bolsheviks, especially those of Borotbist origin, âgreat power prejudices, nourished by breast milk, had become an instinct among very many comrades,â because âin practice no struggle against great power chauvinism was waged in our party.â[34] At the head of those who still demanded the independence of Ukraine and the creation of a union of independent Soviet states, Rakovsky, now a very popular leader among the Ukrainian masses, fiercely opposed Stalin.[35] They lost, but their defeat was incomplete.
The Transformations of Russian Imperialism
The central leadership of the Bolshevik Party, led by Stalin, opposed the aspirations for independence in favor of a linguistic and cultural nationalization of the non-Russian republics. Unexpectedly for its Moscow promoters, Ukrainization turned into an extension of the Ukrainian national revolution, which it revived and remarkably revitalized. It lasted almost 10 years, until 1932. The extermination by hunger (Holodomor) and the crushing of Ukrainization by terror[36] were both constitutive acts of the Stalinist bureaucracy, now separated from the Thermidorian bureaucracy that had ruled until then (and would soon be exterminated by it), and an act of rebirth â this time of Russian military-bureaucratic â imperialism.[37]
The latter was consolidated by the unification of Ukrainian (and Belarusian) lands following the partition of Poland by Hitler and Stalin, and by the annexation of the Baltic states, accomplished in 1939 and confirmed in 1944, during the victorious war against German imperialism. The gigantic plundering of the industrial resources of the Soviet zone of occupied Germany, as well as the domination over the satellite states of Eastern Europe, kept in check by the permanent threat of Soviet military intervention, have sealed this revival of Russian imperialism.[38]
The sudden, totally unexpected fall of the USSR in 1991 revealed the nature of this state, created on the basis of Stalinâs Great Terror. What Ukraine failed to achieve during the collapse of the Russian Empire, it was able to do during the collapse of the Soviet Union. It then managed to break away, like 14 other of the largest non-Russian nations. By declaring its national independence, it dealt a decisive blow to Russian military-bureaucratic imperialism.
Restored on the ruins of the USSR, Russian capitalism remains dependent on the same extra-economic monopoly on which past modes of exploitation depended and, like them, it is distorted by this dependence. The Russian state protects capitalist private property, but at the same time restricts it because this property is subject to state coercion, just as the fusion of the state apparatus with big capitals restricts and distorts competition between them. Thus, under the weight of this monopoly, state oligarchic capitalism and military-oligarchic imperialism have taken shape in Russia.
The imperative of reconquest
However, this monopoly itself has suffered enormous, albeit extremely uneven, degradation. Russia retained its âmonopoly of military powerâ to the extent that, after the collapse of the USSR, it remained the worldâs largest nuclear power with a huge army. On the other hand, its âmonopoly of the vast territories, or special facilities for robbingâ of other peoples has declined profoundly. As Zbigniew Brzezinski observed after the collapse of the USSR, Russiaâs borders receded dramatically, ârolled back to where they had been in the Caucasus in the early 1800s, in Central Asia in the mid-1800s, and â much more dramatically and painfully â in the West in approximately 1600, soon after the reign of Ivan the Terrible.â Worst of all, âwithout Ukraine, Russia ceases to be a Eurasian empireâ and while âcan still strive for imperial status,â the center of gravity would then be shifted and Russia would be doomed to weakness. Brzezinski was right when he wrote that, âif Moscow regains control over Ukraine, with its 52 million people and major resources as well as its access to the Black Sea, Russia automatically again regains the wherewithal to become a powerful imperial state, spanning Europe and Asia.â[39]
This is why Russian imperialism has embarked on the reconquest of Ukraine, where its very destiny is at stake.