As long as Russia remains an empire, Igor Eidman says, Moscow will be repressive at home and aggressive abroad, a reality that the people in Khabarovsk and elsewhere understand and why it is important to see that their opposition to the Kremlin is also opposition to the empire run from there.
“A single and indivisible Russia is needed above all by the ruling class: the bureaucracy, the siloviki and the oligarchs,” the Russian sociologist says. The power vertical works for them but can’t maintain either a legal state on the country’s territory or a decent standard of living for its people.
Indeed, he continues, “as long as the enormous country is run from the Kremlin like an overseas colony, it will be condemned to dictatorship and a vegetative state. The alternative is the de facto independence of the regions and a serious strengthening of the role of local self-administration.” It and that of the regions must take precedence over the center.
Dictators have always viewed the maintenance of their territories as the highest value, something that justifies their repression and aggression, Eidman says. But it is time to stop treating such claims as “a holy cow” that cannot be questioned by anyone. Some regions will leave but that can work to the benefit of both the residents of those who do and everyone else.
One of the ideas the Khabarovsk protesters have talked about points to a useful example from Russian history. “At the end of the Civil War, the Bolsheviks, fearing the Japanese interventionists, created the Far Eastern Republic (FER) as a buffer.” At least initially, it had multi-party democracy and marks. “Then the Kremlin liquidated this completely successful project.”
‘Russia would have lost the Far East,’ but in fact both the residents of the FER and citizens living under Soviet power would have benefited. Stalin’s collectivization and terror wouldn’t have come to its lands, and this republic could have served as an example” for other regions.
An analogue to the FER now could become “a completely successful democratic state. Moscow is far away, its officials treat the Far East as a recalcitrant colony, and their incompetent administration freezes the development of the region,” Eidman argues. Local people could do far better, and many of their descendants now are showing they know that.
The non-Russian republics too are “Kremlin colonies” and their past efforts to gain independence were “drowned in blood by the Kremlin” from Sakha (Yakutia) at the end of the 1920s to Chechnya more recently. These and other republics, Eidman suggests, “of course, have the right to complete independence. Holding them by force in ‘the prison house of peoples’ is a crime.”
If Russia is to have a successful future, it will do so “only on the ruins of the empire” and “possibly not as a single state but as a common cultural space, out of which some national republics will exit.” Those republics and regions who remain may form something like the British Commonwealth, the European Union or the Swiss Confederation.
In any case and despite how utopian all this seems, “sooner or later it can become the reality; and no one should continue to clutch at the dissolving “specter of a single indivisible empire.” Eventually, it won’t exist because “in the contemporary world, empires are condemned to disappear.”
(c) EuromaidanPress

Russia is neither an empire or a federation, it’s a blood sucking leach incapable of surviving without draining all the resources from donor countries.
All empires are parasites. It’s simply their nature. Some are more benign (British), and others are utter evil (Russia and China). It is the nature of empires to hold others in thrall, and both Russia and China have nationality problems, with Russia having, by far, the largest.
Should this benighted land ever become a liberal democracy, it must first return the entire Caucasus region to its rightful owners. Then east of the Urals. Once these peoples have been liberated, the process can continue until all stolen lands have been restored. But no dictatorships can be allowed any more in the liberated lands. The same goes for the stans, the Azeris and Belarus.
Not forgetting Crimea and Kaliningrad either.
“Once these peoples have been liberated, the process can continue until all stolen lands have been restored.”
If this should ever come to pass, there will be little left of mafia land. And that’s why the mafiosi will deny freedom to any peoples under its yoke, regardless of the cost.
https://scontent.fiev10-1.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/109994309_1419886921732868_3305371150827911996_o.jpg?_nc_cat=101&_nc_sid=730e14&_nc_ohc=3x5GwCShSfwAX-l6h9_&_nc_ht=scontent.fiev10-1.fna&oh=282173355ced95c4ebc09484179c0a37&oe=5F3FF81D
Mafia land is a leach and because of its status as a parasite, it will always need hosts to suck blood to survive.
If you would like some insight as to what is going on behind the scenes in Russia, and especially Ukraine, there are two articles by Jeff Nyquist you need to read. They explain much about how Putin fits into the plan laid by The Gorbachev regime and who the oligarchs actually are.
https://jrnyquist.blog/2020/07/22/the-view-from-eastern-europe/#more-3000
https://jrnyquist.blog/2020/07/16/notes-on-a-kgb-officers-insights/#more-1724