Alik Bakhshi
On the
Breakdown of Relations between Azerbaijan and Russia
The recent
breakdown in relations between Baku and Moscow was entirely expected. Russia's
aggressive imperial policies have never been supported by Azerbaijan, and the
ethnic persecution of Azerbaijanis in Russia has exposed the aggressive nature
of the Russian state and the Russian people toward other nations. Some believe
that Putin is to blame, but this is far from the truth, as everything Putin
does finds support among the Russian people. Perhaps I'm just unlucky, but I
haven't met a single Russian who condemns Putin. I was shocked to see a long
line of Russian Israelis at the Tel Aviv embassy voting for Putin during the
presidential election. I'm sure that Russians living in Azerbaijan also support
Putin. Russians, like those in Ukraine or Lithuania, are a fifth column,
supporting the lies emanating from the Kremlin. Aliyev did the right thing by
shutting down Sputnik, known for its espionage and propaganda activities. It's
no wonder this Russian organization was shut down in many countries. I personally
experienced Russian media activity. Ten years ago, not on the Russian, but on
the Azerbaijani Russian-language forum Bakililar.az the
administration there blocked me for my anti-Putin articles without any
explanation. Incidentally, I'm still banned from publishing there. I have no
doubt that, given the opportunity, Russians in Azerbaijan will reveal their
feelings about the country they live in, as happened in Ukraine.
Today, the Kremlin
has unleashed all its full-time propagandists on Azerbaijan and President
Aliyev, who, you see, dared to call on the Russian authorities to maintain
order and justice in accordance with the law.
Some readers have
seen my words as inciting hatred toward the Russian people. As an example, I'll
cite a comment on my Facebook page from a certain Oleg Namazov, who expressed
outrage at my characterization of the Russian people as Great Russian
chauvinism.
Oleg Namazov:
In the USSR, things weren't
like they are now. I said and did whatever I wanted, and the chauvinism was of
the utmost proportions. And yet, I could confidently prove any truth to
Russians, just like an Azerbaijani, whether in Moscow or Irkutsk. And so, this
point of view of yours is also part of the toolkit of those who pull strings
and manipulate public opinion...
Oleg Namazov, you're saying the
chauvinism was of the utmost proportions? Doesn't the fact that all higher
education textbooks were in Russian mean anything to you? Dissertations were
required to be written exclusively in Russian. In other words, the entire
elite, the entire cultural stratum of any people in the USSR, had to be
represented in Russian. The national languages of
the peoples were in danger of disappearing. Russians generally didn't know the
language of the indigenous peoples in the republics and even mocked those who
spoke Russian poorly. And if anyone protested this situation, they would be
labelling a nationalist and, at best, sent to a mental hospital. The national
republics were subjected to state-sponsored plunder. Have you ever wondered
why, when the country was starving, people went to Moscow for sausage and
butter? You say you did whatever you wanted in the USSR, but your desires were
very limited, like a bug that needs nothing more than an acre of blood. I, too,
wanted fried potatoes back then, but the butter disappeared from the grocery
stores in Baku. I had no choice but to fly to Moscow to fulfill my desire. I
bought 15 kg of butter, which I melted in the student dorm. The smell of melted
butter permeated the entire floor. Oleg Namazov probably hasn't wondered why
Moscow has everything, while Baku doesn't even have such a basic commodity as
butter.
Azerbaijan, having freed itself
from Moscow, has been transformed, and this is a clear example of what
independence from Russia has brought. And what kind of Russian people are they,
who overwhelmingly vote for Putin and consider Crimea and Ukraine Russian soil,
is evident from the atrocities they witnessed in Bucha and Baku. This is
chauvinism, which you've sized up to the size of a bedbug. Rather, your dear
fellow, you have the brain of a bedbug.
And the USSR, by its very nature,
was a gigantic bedbug, sucking the blood of other peoples, reducing them to
poverty. And when everything had been sucked dry, Moscow, realizing it had
nothing left to feed itself with, issued a cry: "We have nothing left to
feed the other republics with." And now that the free republics have grown
stronger, it has smelled fresh blood. This is the essence of Russia and its
people. It is the people who determine the place where they live. As the saying
goes, it's not the place that makes the man, but the man that makes the place.
So, the people of Russia are like their country. And Russia is an aggressor,
and it's not Putin's fault, but the Russian people. However, this applies to
any nation. No one but the people is responsible for everything they've done.
In short, the country is like the people. For example, Finland is the most
prosperous country, and it owes its prosperity to the people who live there.
Finland has no oil or gas, a quarter of the country is covered in snow for
eight months, while Russia has oil, gas, and fertile soil, yet its people live
in poverty. Relocate Finns to Russia, and Russians to Finland, and it's not
hard to imagine what prosperous Finland would become, and how Russia would be
transformed. Finns work and create wealth, build enormous airliners, produce
telephones—in other words, they produce everything for the benefit of the
people—while Russians create Kalashnikovs to rob and kill people. There you
have it, a distinctive feature, in this case, of the Russian people, from other
nations.
05.07.2025
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