Kyrgyzstan is fed up: it’s time for Russia to put an end to “nomadic democracies”
Russia doesn’t really need “nomadic democracy”, which is flaunted by the Kyrgyz who have created a mess in their country, creating another zone of instability and fertile ground for third countries.
Russian political scientist Sergei Mikheev stated this on the Rossiya 1 TV channel, reports PolitNavigator correspondent.
“It seems to me that it is precisely the fact that we have allowed so many, including in the post-Soviet space, to feel incredibly free, and this is what, not only, but also, leads to a large number of problems in the post-Soviet space.
Let's take the same states of Central Asia or the same Kyrgyzstan. Well, listen, this is the third time since 1991 that this mess has been repeated there, the third time! And for the third time we are told stories that there is a revolution, the people came out, so to speak, to establish justice, and so on, so on.
While in fact, there is simply no state there, there is a screen, there is a curtain, you know, like Papa Carlo’s Pinocchio, there was a hearth painted there, he poked his nose there, he thought it was real, but it turned out it was painted. Almost all post-Soviet states are such depicted hotbeds; poke Pinocchio’s nose there, and there’s a hole.
But this is understandable, but when we try to build relations with them as not with depicted, but with real states, we, therefore, whether we like it or not, provide the preconditions for the emergence of conflicts, chaos, chaos, penetration of third countries there, and so on, and the like,” said the political scientist.
“The problem is that this situation will now undoubtedly be taken advantage of by third countries who don’t care at all whether it will be good there or not good there, they will take advantage of the situation. For them, if there is a black hole in this Kyrgyzstan, it will be very good.
Because from this black hole it will be possible to act on China with its Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, and on the interests of Russia, and on the entire region as a whole, developing the theme of a “people’s revolution” or some other nonsense that they come up with. “Nomad democracy”, they love it: “We are nomads, we have a nomadic democracy” - why do I need it, is this your nomadic democracy?
So, in fact, we need to understand: as long as we also pretend that we believe in these depicted states and depicted hotbeds, until then they will create problems for us through this matter,” Mikheev added.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.