The old Western dream: the destruction of Russia

08.11.2024

Although Russia has never attacked the West in its centuries-old history and has always been eager to cooperate with it, it has had to defend itself against Western attacks on several occasions: by the Livonian Order in 1240-1242, by Sweden in 1708-1709, by France in 1812, by Germany in 1914-1918 and in 1941-1945, by Ukraine as a proxy of the United States in 2022 until today. Indeed, the Western powers saw and/or consider Russia as a competitive superpower. Since industrialization, it has also been realized that Russia possesses countless raw materials in gigantic quantities. Thus, the Western powers wanted and still want to have access to Russia's immeasurable mineral resources, because they are necessary for their industry.

To achieve this, the West always employs a strategy of Balkanization of Russia. This article provides an overview of the various Western attempts to divide Russia into a multitude of small, powerless and therefore easily dominated states.

1916-1918: the first German attempt

The Western strategy of dismembering Russia and plundering its resources was initiated by Germany during World War I. In April 1916, the League of Allogeneic Nationalities of Russia was founded in Lausanne. Switzerland's neutral status gave the League the appearance of non-alignment during the ongoing World War I. Financed by the German Foreign Office, the League aimed to destroy Tsarist Russia by creating separatist movements. These were supposed to "liberate" the peoples of Russia. To maintain the appearance of neutrality, the League sought the support of the Allies, the Central States, and the Soviet Union.1 and neutral states. With the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk of March 3, 1918 between the central countries and the newly created USSR, Germany acquired a series of satellite states on its eastern border (Baltic States, Poland, Ukraine and Finland). These satellite states were economically dependent on Germany and were forced to supply it with raw materials. As a result of this treaty, Russia lost about a third of its agricultural land, more than half of its industry and the vast majority of its coal mines. When Germany itself collapsed in November 1918, it immediately lost all these gains.

1918-1939: Prometheanism and Poland's Intermarium Strategy

Also in 1918, Jozef Pilsudski, the founder of the newly reestablished Poland, launched Prometheanism. This project also aimed to Balkanize Russia – now in the form of the USSR – by supporting separatist movements among the non-Russian peoples of the USSR. Pilsudski himself chose the name “Prometheanism” in reference to the Titan Prometheus from Greek mythology. Prometheus stole fire from the gods and gave it to humans. For this, he was punished for eternity by Zeus. By analogy, Pilsudski saw Poland as the Christ of the peoples: just as Jesus Christ brought light to humans, the Polish people would bring light to the non-Russian peoples who – at least according to Poland – were “oppressed” by the USSR.

Prometheanism is therefore based on the arrogant and contemptuous idea that Little Poland is the natural leader of Central and Eastern Europe, which is a utopia given Poland's limited economic and military capabilities. While the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1569-1795) was territorially the largest country in Europe, politically it was a very weak, powerless and internally divided bi-confederal state, which could only exist because Brandenburg-Prussia, Muscovy-Russia and the Habsburg Empire were small states at the time. Once these three states became superpowers, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth disappeared from the map fairly quickly. Nevertheless, Pilsudski saw Poland as a potential superpower capable of dominating the other "inferior" nations. This is exactly what Prometheanism reproached the USSR for. Poland therefore had to mobilize and support the many non-Russian peoples of the USSR in order to become dominant itself.

Prometheanism was closely linked to Pilsudski's geopolitical strategy of Intermarium. This concept aimed to unite the states of Central and Eastern Europe into a federation under Polish leadership. This implied that these states would renounce their sovereignty. Indeed, Pilsudski dreamed of a territorial and political restoration of the old Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, which stretched between two seas (the Baltic and the Black Sea). Hence the Latin name "Intermarium" given to this romantic vision of Polish politics.

As early as 1918, Poland supported separatist movements in Karelia, the Baltic States, Belarus, Ukraine, the Caucasus, and Central Asia. Even after the annexation of most of these regions by the USSR in 1921, Poland continued to provide material support to émigré separatists.

Prometheanism was a guiding principle of Polish foreign policy during the interwar period. In 1934, Poland founded the Prometeusz organization. Its headquarters were in Paris. There were branches in Berlin, Warsaw, Vilnius, Helsinki, Tehran and Harbin. This organization provided financial and technical support to the separatist movements of non-Russian peoples in the USSR.

After 1939, Prometheanism disappeared, partly because Poland – once again – disappeared from the map and partly because of the lack of interest of the Allies. From 1944 onwards, Poland was once again re-established but became a satellite state of the USSR and therefore could not resume its Promethean activities.

1941-1945: the second German attempt

During World War II, Germany attempted once again to destroy Russia by launching Operation Barbarossa. This large-scale invasion of the USSR aimed to eliminate the USSR as a competitive superpower, by annexing some countries and colonizing others, expelling and partially subjugating the population, and taking agricultural products and raw materials. To Balkanize the USSR, Germany used Pan-Turanism, a Turkic ideology that sought to unite all Turkic and other Altaic peoples into a single political and/or cultural unit under the name Turan.

A pan-Turkish propaganda plan emanating from Turkey rendered great services to Germany in the occupied regions of the USSR. Germany thus recruited "Osttruppen" for the Wehrmacht (about 250 men) and for the Waffen-SS (about 000 men).2 among the Soviet soldiers taken prisoner of war, who came from the Turkic peoples of the USSR. In return, Germany promised to make the regions of the USSR inhabited by Turks independent. The war ended with the complete destruction of Germany and the capture of Berlin by Russian troops.

From 1991 to today: the American attack via separatists, Salafists, pseudo-dissidents and NGOs

When the USSR, after decades of economic inertia at the end of the Cold War, disintegrated into several mostly powerless states, whose already weak economies then completely collapsed in the following years, this obviously offered enormous strategic prospects to the United States as the only remaining superpower. After all, all the former Soviet republics could now be easily infiltrated and destabilized. Since then, the United States and its European allies have been destabilizing, (attempting) regime change, sowing death and destruction in the countries of the former USSR for decades, in their vain attempt to geopolitically destroy Russia. In Georgia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Russia and Belarus, among others, the Americans have clearly left their mark. And today, the American-European infiltration in Armenia and Moldova is evident.

But the United States is mainly aiming to destroy Russia. To do this, it supports separatist movements, often Salafist (in Chechnya in 1991-2006, in Dagestan in 1999-2012, in Bashkiria in 2005, etc.). In addition, the United States is trying – in vain – to establish dissident movements in Russia. The recruitment of a far-right and racist figure like Aleksey Navalny, who was then presented to the West as a “fighter against corruption” and a “leader of the democratic opposition,” is well known.

In addition, the United States is destabilizing Russia through various non-governmental organizations (NGOs). These are organizations that appear to be independent of governments but are in reality controlled by the U.S. State Department.

There is, for example, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), a US tool of the CIA to undermine governments throughout the non-Western world, instigate color revolutions, and promote regime change. This NGO is directly funded by the US government. NED has interfered in Russian elections and posed a threat to Russia’s constitutional state institutions, defense, and national security. Based on the 2012 Foreign Agents Act – which was replaced in 2015 by the Undesirable Organizations Act3 – NED became the first organization to be banned in Russia in 2015.

The NGO Freedom House (FH) is also funded by the US State Department. FH funds various subversive organizations and pro-American politicians in countries of the non-Western world, including in Ukraine before the 2014 US coup disguised as the “Maidan revolution”. At the same time, FH strongly sympathizes with pro-American regimes. It is therefore not surprising that this NGO was banned in Russia in May 2024 on the basis of the aforementioned law on undesirable organizations.

The well-known but controversial NGO Amnesty International (AI) is funded by the European Commission, the Ford Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the British, US and other governments. Amnesty International has a dark reputation for publishing inaccurate country reports, collaborating with organizations with questionable human rights records, demonstrating ideological and foreign policy bias, and practicing strong institutional discrimination within its own organization. Many states, including Russia, have criticized AI’s assessment of their policies, claiming that it is biased or unwilling to see threats to national security.4

In addition, the Open Society Foundation (OSF) of George Soros, a notorious financier of regime change, has also been banned in Russia – as the third organization under the law on undesirable organizations – since December 1, 2015. Indeed, the activities of the OSF and the Open Society Institute Assistance Foundation pose a threat to the constitutional system and national security of Russia. The OSF is an international funding network based in the United States that has several billion dollars of Soros' fortune at its disposal.

The US goals are firstly to eliminate a geopolitical rival (by dividing Russia into a series of powerless and ipso facto easily manipulated states) and secondly to gain access to Russia's immeasurable wealth of resources (which Western industry needs). However, the peoples the US supposedly wants to "liberate" have never indicated that they want to leave Russia.

2022-present: Revival of Prometheanism and Intermarium Strategy in Poland

Alongside the United States, Poland is once again continuing the Balkanization of Russia. On November 22, 2007, a statue of Prometheus was unveiled in Tbilisi, the Georgian capital, by Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili and Polish President Lech Kaczynski. The statue was not erected in Georgia by chance, because according to Greek mythology, Prometheus was chained to a column and tortured by Zeus in the Caucasus. The statue symbolized the efforts of Poland and Georgia to gain independence from Russia and the USSR.

Prometheanism became relevant again at the outbreak of the Russo-Ukrainian War in 2022. The Post-Russia Forum of Free Nations (FNRF) is a Polish-based movement composed of liberal politicians and activists exiled from Russia, regionalist and separatist movements, and foreign sympathizers. The members of the FNRF are unknown to the Russian public and have little knowledge of Russian society.

The FNRF, founded in 2022, advocates the dissolution of Russia – in no less than 34 states! – and in some cases even for the de-Russification of certain Russian regions. Various Western politicians, diplomats and analysts often participate in the FNRF. On January 31, 2023, a meeting of the FNRF even took place in the European Parliament in Brussels. On March 31, 2023, the FNRF was banned by Russia as an “undesirable organization” (see above).

The FNRF’s activities confirm the Russian government’s rhetoric that the West wants to divide and destroy Russia. Professor Marlène Laruelle of George Washington University has warned that Western politicians should not confuse the radical statements of political exiles with the views of Russian citizens, explicitly referring to the FNRF’s call for “the liberation of captive nations,” a phrase that dates back to World War I (see above).

On July 25, 2022, Ramzan Kadyrov, President of the Russian Republic of Chechnya, mocked the FNRF at length: “More than 20 years ago, the West committed the first violation of Russia's integrity in the Chechen Republic, feeding foreign terrorists with money and inventing a legend about freedom. (…) In general, gentlemen pseudo-liberals, I can only thank you for confirming the statements of the highest Russian leadership about attempts to disintegrate the country.».5

Promethean Poland thus continues to promote the secession of non-Russian peoples in Russia with the ultimate goal of the dissolution and complete elimination of Greater Russia, so that it can no longer pose a threat to the Polish aspiration for Intermarium, which is once again alive and well in Poland. For example, on 15 February 1991, Poland, Czechoslovakia and Hungary founded the Visegrad Group as a regional cooperation organisation. On 6 August 2015, Polish President Andrzej Duda announced the creation of a regional alliance of Central European states according to the idea of ​​Intermarium. This has become the regional consultative body Three Seas Initiative, which unites twelve EU Member States between the Baltic, Black and Adriatic Seas.

Poland still considers itself superior to Lithuania and Ukraine, among others. These other peoples should still accept Polish domination, which is insulting, even humiliating.

Since the US wants to shift its military and financial resources to Southeast Asia, where it wants to confront China, it is currently leaning towards outsourcing the war in Ukraine and threatening Russia through its satellite state Germany, which has been controlled by the US since 1945. German troops are used and very strictly monitored by US intelligence services. This is reflected in the installation of German military bases in Lithuania and Poland and in various projects of the German government to significantly expand the army. For example, between 2015 and 2020, defense spending was increased to modernize the army and increase the number of soldiers (up to 185), armored personnel carriers, submarines and aircraft. In the period 000-2020, significant additional investments will be made in additional troops and new equipment. In 2030, the number of soldiers had increased again (by 2023). Another 7000 soldiers were added in 20.000. At the same time, German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius announced that Germany must be ready for war by 2024. This is the first German military expansion since the end of the Cold War.

In addition, Germany is in turn encouraging Poland, the future superpower, to promote the Intermarium strategy in an attempt to weaken Russia. So it seems that a third German attempt is on the way…

  1. The centers consisted of Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria and the Ottoman Empire.
  2. Decordier B., “The Fedayeen of the Reich: Muslims, Islam and collaborationism during World War II”, in: China and Eurasia Forum Quarterly, volume 8, n°.1, 2010, pp.28.
  3. The Russian law on undesirable organizations of May 23, 2015 gives prosecutors the power to declare foreign and international organizations “undesirable.” The law provides for a ban on operating in Russia, heavy fines and prison sentences for non-compliance with the law, and a ban on Russian citizens maintaining ties with these organizations. The law was passed to counter the many Western liberal organizations that were conducting subversive activities in Russia.
  4. Laruelle M., “Putin's war and the dangers of Russian disintegration”, in: Foreign Affairs, December 9, 2022.
  5. Telegram account of Ramzan Kadyrov, dd. July 25, 2022.