Something I’ve heard from both liberal friends irl and liberals online (especially if they are from the Baltics, Ukraine, and possibly Central Asia) is that the USSR/Russia was/is a settler colonial empire. I will often hear this claim in the context about discussion of western settler colonialism.

If a socialist points out the (indisputable) fact that settler colonial genocide and ethnic cleansing is a structural component of western liberal democracy and its capitalist expansion, pro-western liberals will pull a reverse “whataboutism” and claim that “actually, it’s not unique to America, Canada, Israel, Britain, etc. because the evil communist Russians did it in [Ukraine, Poland, the Baltics, the Central Asian republics] too!”

I always found this suspicious. Like, I know there were ethnic deportations under Stalin and obviously that’s fucked up. But is that really comparable to the completely endemic nature of this shit to western governments for the past 500 years? The character of the USSR, being a state that emerged from a reactionary empire but also not one explicitly founded on racial supremacist ideology, always made these equivalencies between western vs. Russian settler colonialism ring hollow to me.

In sum, I would like a clear, more objective, and contextualized explanation of ethnic policy in the USSR and Warsaw Pact writ large since trying to do a comparison of pure deportation and death statistics feels like a macabre and futile exercise.

EDIT: The overarching reason I wanted to look into this is because I get annoyed by liberal narratives of history that mostly just group people and movements into being either “good” or “bad” according to their set of prescribed moral axioms (rule of law, individual freedoms, property rights, yada yada). Structures inherent to modern capitalism like colonization/imperialism are simply dismissed as “ah, well that’s because of bad people, unlike us, who only want good things!” They’ll turn around and point at socialist or anti-colonial projects as engaging in the same crimes because, again, “bad people” are the ones who inevitably end up in charge if you get too radical. They will say, “socialist revolution is bad, don’t you know Stalin killed people? We can only have small incremental changes.” There is never any further examination or analysis of historical or economic contexts, or why things happen. It’s all just “good” people and “bad” people.

  • Erika3sis [she/her, xe/xem]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    I believe some keywords here are “Circassian genocide” and “de-Cossackization”. I have a hard time finding explicitly Marxist sources about these things and there naturally tend to be a lot of brainworms in how non-Marxist sources discuss these things — which I find a bit shameful, because the Circassian genocide is one of those historical events where once you know about it, it suddenly starts showing up in all sorts of unusual places. It’s got connections to P. T. Barnum’s circus, a random Japanese Internet meme, the Sochi Olympics, the conscription practices of the IOF, the extinction of the non-click language with the greatest number of consonants, and the way Cossacks dress, among other things.

    Prolewiki’s incredibly brief mention of the Circassian genocide on the page for “Russian Empire” cites Austin Murphy’s The Triumph of Evil (2000), which itself doesn’t say much about the Circassian genocide, but does cite The Massacre in History (War and Genocide, 1) by Mark Levene and Penny Roberts (1999), so that book might be a good place to start when it comes to Imperial Russian settler-colonialism along the Black Sea coast — though I haven’t read it myself so I can’t necessarily give it my stamp of approval. I don’t know where you’d find a PDF of it.

    The only mention of “de-Cossackization” on the Marxists Internet Archive is this Macedonian-language article.

    Otherwise, you have the keywords, so you can find a lot of liberal writings through Wikipedia or Google Scholar or JSTOR or whatever else.