By Henry Srebrnik, [Summerside, PEI] Journal Pioneer
As all those who study nationalism know, one
of the major
sources of conflict between states relates to what is known as
irredentism.
This refers to any movement or country that
seeks to reclaim
and occupy a land that it considers to be a “lost” or
“unredeemed” territory
that it once owned.
Such territorial claims are justified on the
basis of real
or imagined national notions of historic, territorial, religious
or ethnic affiliations.
There are many serious cases of irredentist
claims around
the world, and they often spark wars. Some seem dormant – but
are they?
Visiting Alaska recently, I wondered if there
was any “seller’s
remorse” in Russia regarding a former colony that is now an
American state.
It’s been more than 150 years since Tsar
Alexander II of
Russia sold Alaska, across the Bering Strait from Siberia, to
the United
States.
At the time, it seemed to make sense. The
Russians had lost
the Crimean War to European rivals Britain and France a decade
earlier, and
they feared that the British, already in control of most of
northern North
America, might wrest it from them.
To forestall this, in 1867 they sold Alaska
to the United
States, then still a relatively minor power and certainly no
threat to them.
Russian
America was the name of the
tsarist colonial
possessions in North America from 1733 to 1867. The
Russians were
primarily interested in the abundance of fur-bearing mammals on
Alaska’s coast.
The fur trade proved to be a lucrative
enterprise, and on
1784, with encouragement from Empress Catherine the Great,
permanent settlement
in Alaska began.
In 1799 the Russian-American Company was
created in order to
monopolize the fur trade. Alexander Baranov (for whom a hotel is
named in
present-day Juneau) was promoted by the company as chief
manager, effectively
becoming the first governor of Russian America.
The capital was established in New
Arkhangelsk (today’s
Sitka) and became known as the “Paris of the Pacific Ocean.”
Angered by encroachment on their land,
Tlingit warriors
destroyed several Russian settlements, but the Russians
re-established their
presence following the Battle of Sitka in 1804.
By the middle of the 19th century, though,
profits from the
colony were in steep decline and the Russians concluded that it
was too
expensive to retain. They also feared that if gold were
discovered (as it
eventually was), Americans might overrun the territory.
U.S. Secretary of State William Seward had
wanted to
purchase Alaska for quite some time as he saw it as an integral
part of
“manifest destiny.” The purchase would position the U.S. closer
to trade with
China, and fend off any British thoughts of encroachment on the
West Coast.
Though many skeptics called it “Seward’s
folly,” Washington
purchased the colony for $7.2 million. As it turned out, it was
money well
spent!
Some Russians now regret the decision. So the
150th
anniversary last year of Russia’s sale was a day of mourning for
some
right-wing Russian nationalists who see the transaction as a
gigantic blunder,
one that lessened Moscow’s influence in an Arctic with natural
riches in an age
of climate change.
“If Russia was in possession of Alaska today,
the
geopolitical situation in the world would have been different,”
Sergey
Aksyonov, the prime minister of Crimea, remarked. A Russian
military magazine
ran an article on “The Alaska We’ve Lost.”
Alexander Dugin, a Russian philosopher and
strategist known
for his fascist views, and one of the founding fathers of the
“Eurasian
civilization doctrine,” has stated that the sale should be
re-discussed.
Sergey Lavrov, Russia’s foreign minister, was
more
diplomatic. “The anniversary may, of course, trigger diverse
emotions,” he
said. “But it is a good occasion to refresh memories of
Russians’ contribution
to exploration of the American continent.”
Andrei Znamenski a history professor at the
University of
Memphis, told the New York Times that irredentist calls to
reclaim Alaska were
not limited to extremists.
“It’s a very convenient episode for
nationalists, who want
Russia to expand, to exploit,” he said. “It fits into national
rhetoric: Look
how the Americans have treated us.”
Today the Russian-American border runs
through the Diomede
Islands in the middle of the Bering Strait. Big Diomede belongs
to Russia and
Little Diomede to the US. The distance between them is a mere
3.8 kilometres.
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