NATIONALISM IN SOVIET UKRAINE(Classified) AUGUST 1975

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP86T00608R000600170006-3
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
C
Document Page Count: 
17
Document Creation Date: 
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
March 25, 1999
Sequence Number: 
6
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
August 1, 1975
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
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PDF icon CIA-RDP86T00608R000600170006-3.pdf642.27 KB
Body: 
>, , ' . 1 jj~ {j ~{j jj~ jj~ (3 ` ~ ~ }~ , Apprq~~~for IYelease~"200110$J21 FCfA-RDPS~TQ11G08 OO~OD~T10006-3 ~ , r - .~.; .,,, ., ,. ~ ,` .J .,. . m. 1 ~ !! !! !! tt t !! ,. ~,.,f i i~ 'iii ...J., ~ t s k i :t f ~ F ,~; Approved For Release 2001/08/21 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600170006-3 Nationalism in Soviet Ukraine 25X1A9a August 1975 The Soviet Union is a multi-national state in an age of nationalism. Of the three great European land empires of the nineteenth century -the Austrian, Turkish, and Russian -- only the Russian is still intact. Although the vital signs of the soviet empire remain strong, many of its national minorities -- which number over 100, and make up almost half of the Soviet population -- continue to resist the "melting pot" process, and some of them are becoming more rather than less assertive. Accordingly, the nationalities problem is one of the most per- sistent and vexing do~aestic problems cu;.ironting Soviet author- ities today. This paper, a distillation of a research study, "Nationalism i7 Soviet Ukraine," examines nationalist tendencies among the largest and most influential Soviet national minority. It estimates the extent to which centrifugal and destabilizing forces are at work in the Ukraine, and evaluates Moscow's efforts to contain them. Forces of Integration and Forces of Se aration Many factors contribute to the vitality of Ukrainian SUBJECT TO GENERAL DECLASSIFICATIVN SCHEDULE OF E. 0. 11E~52, AiJ'IntNATICALL'Y DECLASSIFIED IN AUGUST 1981 PR 75-111M Approved For Release 2001/08/21 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600170006-3 Approved For Release 2001/0~~~86T00608R000600170006-3 national feeling and tend to stiffen Ukrainian resistance to Russification: -- They have a rich cultural k~eritage and retain a degree of pride that they are more "European" than the Russians. -- They occupy an area of great economic significance, which serves both as a granary and as a major mineral producer of the Soviet Union. -- The sheer weight of their numbers (Ukrainians make up 17 percent of the Soviet population) adds to their strength. Yet, these centrifugal tendencies may be diluted by other forces: -- Ethnically and linguistically the Ukrainians have considerable affinity to the Russians, who are also members of the East Slav fa;nily. -- The eastern part of the Ukraine --- which contains most of the republic's popula~,tion, resources, and industry -- has belonged to the Russian or Soviet empire during most of the modern period. East Ukrainians are close to the Russians in c;~ltural and religious background. -- Soviet authorities tend to accept Ukrainians, fellow Slavs, on an almost equal footing with Russians in elite recruitment. -2-? CnNFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2001/08/21 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600170006-3 Approved For Release 2001/08/21 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600170006-3 CONFIDENTIAL -- Under Khrushchev and Brezhnev, both of whom rose through the Ukrainian Communist Party, the Ukrainian Party has enjoyed a privileged position. 'Phe Ukrainians are more completely integrated into the Soviet system than most other Soviet national minorities, and the system has been relatively good to them. Their similarity to the Russians may give central c,uthorities some grounds for hope that assimilation may ultimately solve the Ukrainian problem. Russification in the Ukraine A survey of linguistic and demographic trends suggests that time may indeed be on the side of the forces of assimilation in East Ukraine. The process is slow, but the Russian element in *.he cities of East ;Jkraine is growing, through assimilation of Ukrainians and migration of Russians. T~inguist is Russification there is proceeding steadily. In the urban areas of East Ukraine today the number of ethnic Russians and linguistically Russifie6 Ukrainians (those who claim Russian as their native tongue) roughly equals the number of unassimilated Ukrainians. In West Ukraine the statistics tell a somewhat different story. West Ukraine has morE than held its own against Russian encroachments. This fact points to an important dimension of the Ukrainian problem. While East Ukraine shares much of its long history with Russia, the Soviet annexation of West Ukraine, OONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2001/08/21 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600170006-3 Approved For Release 2001/08~,j~~J~R6T00608R000600170006-3 occurring only during World War II, introduced into the Soviet system an alien and generally hostile population which can be Russified, if at ali, only through a massive and prolonged effort. While assimilation is gradually taking place in Cast Ukraine, this does nit preclude the possibility that Ukrainian opposition to Russian rule may be increasing, partly because of the West Ukrainian infection. The two tendencies would not necessarily be incompatible. Tl~e very forces of urbanization, social mobilization, and mass education, which work to efface national differences in the long run, may simultaneously heighten consciousness of those differences in the short run. The typical Ukrainian dissident is an urban intellectual of peasant stock, the person most aware both of the Ukrainian identity and of the forces working to weaken this identit~;+, The protests of Ukrainian nationalists in the cities are ~.ri part provoked by the very success of Russification, by t1!e~ gradual assimilation of Ukrainians, the demeaning of the indigenous culture, and the competition for jobs between. Russians and Ukrainians. Nationalist Dissent in the Ukraine Nationalism in the Ukraine does appear to be growing, or at least becoming more vocal. During the last several decades Approved For Release 2001/08/21 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600170006-3 Approved For Release 2001/08/21 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600170006-3 CONFIDCNTIAL Ukrainian dissent has undergone aii evolution -- from the armed, anti-Soviet resistance of World War II, to the formation of conspit~atorial groups in the 1950s, to the flourishing of open protest in the 1960s. The period of the late 1960s witnessed the emergence of a new type of dissent, avowedly Marxist in orientation, which appealed to new Soviet elites for whom traditional Ukrainian nationalism seemed outdated. Dissidents since then have been less organized and more fragmented, less clandestine and more overt, less single-minded in their guest for national sovereignty and more variegated, less militant but perhaps more geographica~.ly widespread. Overt dissent probably reached its peak between 1966 and 1970, in the wake of the invasion of Czechoslovakia and. during the period when Petr Shelest, then First Secretary of the Ukrainian Party, was permitting dissident writers a measure of latitude. Since Shelest's removal in 1972, his successor's campaign for ideological conformity has put the dissidents on the defensive, but they have not been completely silenced and the reintroduction of more dracanian measures may have radicalized them. A geographical and sociological breakdown of dissidents rEVeals that dissent is not completely confine