One of them, which reconciles geopolitical and demographic objectives, is "passportization" or the distribution of Russian passports in occupied or disputed areas - Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Transnistria, Crimea, the Donbas, Nagorno-Karabakh. Even before the 2008 war, 90% of Abkhazians and South Ossetians had Russian passports. And in the past three years, at least 650,000 citizens of Donbas were granted Russian passports.
Another involves easing the naturalization of "native speakers". After a 2014 reform to that effect, a 2019 action plan sought to grant citizenship to 5-10 million people by 2025, targeting Russian-speakers from the former Union. In 2020, Russia welcomed a record number of new citizens - 660,000 including 410,000 from Ukraine and 145,000 from Central Asia.
Finally, the annexation of Crimea allowed for an additional 2.5 million people to become Russian citizens in a single day.
Ukraine as a reservoir of population?
To sum up, this demographic background puts into perspective the true geopolitical catastrophe that was the "loss" of Ukraine (and its population of 52 million at the time), and explains why the independence of the latter felt almost like an amputation to Russia.
Further annexations of territory in the West would help Russia solve its demographic conundrum. But this is less likely and desirable than a scenario where Ukraine would stay close to Russia - ideally as a member of the EEA. Ukraine’s proximity would allow for a much higher influx of Slavic workers "going East" instead of "going West" (to Poland in particular). As an expert put it, Ukrainians "are almost ideal migrants. As Eastern Slavs, they are considered easy to integrate; they bring the necessary skills for the Russian labor market".
This is not to say that the population problem is at the heart of Moscow’s strategy with regards to Ukraine. But overlooking the demographic dimension of the Kremlin’s vision and calculations would mean turning a blind eye to a significant historical, cultural, and socio-political component of Russia’s national identity.
Copyright: Yuri KADOBNOV / AFP
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