From Harold Meyerson, The American Prospect <[email protected]>
Subject Meyerson on TAP: Ukraine, Putin, and Aida
Date January 25, 2022 10:40 PM
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JANUARY 25, 2022

Meyerson on TAP

Ukraine, Putin, and Aida

It's not military attack that Russia's president fears. It's the
specter of liberalism.

When my grandmother got through the processing at Ellis Island-a
Jewish girl still in her teens in flight from czarist Russia-she left
with the Anglicized name of Edith. But her given name wasn't Edith, of
course, nor was it actually a Russian name or a Yiddish name or a Hebrew
name. It was an Italianized version of an Egyptian name. Her name was
Aida.

Once in the States, she went by Edith, or, to her grandchildren, Bubba
(mixing the Yiddish "bubbe" with the Southern "bubba," as she improbably
ended up in Tennessee when her grandchildren began arriving). It
wasn't until several decades ago that my family discovered her actual
name, and more recently than that when I came across an explanation of
how she became an Aida. I was reading a biography of Trotsky, who, like
Bubba, was born and at least partly raised in Odessa, when I came across
this sentence: "When Trotsky was ten, a mania for Italian opera swept
the Odessa upper classes."

Bubba, who was ten years younger than Trotsky, was born and raised in
Odessa, where her father's brother had somehow managed to become very
rich through his ownership of sugar plantations and processing plants.
Mystery solved; case closed.

But my curiosity about Odessa had been piqued. Then the second-largest
city in Ukraine, after only Kyiv, swaddled by a warm climate, perched on
the Black Sea, it was almost surely more multilingual, more ethnically
and religiously diverse, than any other large Russian city (it was
roughly one-third Jewish). By all accounts, its culture, tone, and, if
you will, essence, were more European than those of any other Russian
city, too. Suffice it to say that the 1917 revolution, the ensuing civil
war, and the Nazis greatly diminished Odessa's exceptionalism.

It's the specter of that exceptionalism, I think, that most troubles
Vladimir Putin. Russia's president doesn't really think that NATO,
even if expanded into Ukraine (which ain't gonna happen in any event),
poses a military threat to Russia. Rather, it poses the threat of
encroaching Europeanization, the undermining and supplanting of Russian
autocratic and neo-Russian Orthodox norms by those of liberal
democracy. The

**cordon sanitaire**Putin wants around Russia isn't really intended to
deter a revanchist and militarily ascendent Germany, as was the case
when Stalin installed communist regimes throughout Eastern Europe. It
isn't even intended to deter capitalism, since Putin is committed to
and reportedly greatly profits from Russia's kleptocratic capitalist
economy. The Putin Buffer Zone is intended to deter a culture and an
ideology: the liberalism of the West, imperfect though the West's
liberalism may be. The real threat he consistently works to suppress is
that from more liberal and democratic Muscovites and Petersburgians and,
if he can somehow get his hands on Ukraine, Odessans.

Whether keeping Ukraine out of NATO by invading it will advance that
cause strikes me as improbable. Hungary, after all, is a NATO member,
and looks a little more like Putin's Russia with each passing day.
There's currently enough authoritarianism bubbling up in the West,
usually in the form of white Christian nationalism and xenophobia, that
he'd do better to find ways to non-militarily support those regimes,
such as Hungary's, and those movements, such as the French right, that
share his revulsion at pluralism and liberalism. At least, if his goal
is to save Russia from a generation of 21st-century Aida equivalents.

~ HAROLD MEYERSON

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