Modernization Without Westernization
Modernization Without Westernization
Modernization Without Westernization
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Alexander Dugin
while the poor get poorer. Accordingly, List asserts, traditionally liberal countries (and primarily the Anglo-Saxon ones)
excessively benefit from imposing their own model on everyone else, as this guarantees their obtainment of colossal economic
and political profit.
But what is the way out for such non-liberal countries which, due to objective circumstances, are confronted with effective and
aggressive liberal competitors? This problem was especially acute for Germany in the 19th century, that very country which
Friedrich List was called to aid. His answer was the theory of the autarchy of large spaces which is an economic synonym for
modernization without Westernization. It should be noted that Lists ideas were employed by such different politicians as
Walther Rathenau, Count Witte, and Vladimir Lenin with enormous success.
The concept of the autarchy of large spaces implies that non-market states left in the conditions of harsh competition with
market ones should work out a model of autonomous development which partly reproduces the technological developments of
liberal systems in the severely restrictive framework of a large-scale customs union. In this case, freedom of trade is limited
to the framework of a strategic bloc of states integrating their political and economic-administrative efforts in order to rapidly
increase economic dynamics. In relation to the more developed liberal countries, by contrast, a protective customs barrier is
raised based on the principles of strict protectionism. Thus, the scope for expanding the newest economic technologies is
maximally widened while, on the other hand, this is supported by consistent political and economic sovereignty.
Undoubtedly, such an approach extremely discomforts the liberals of developed market states as it exposes their strategy,
reveals their aggressive undertones, and effectively counteracts their geopolitical interference and, ultimately, their external
control over those states which the liberals seek to transform into economic and political colonies.
Modernization and Sovereignty
Let us note that the thesis of modernization without Westernization is itself a conceptual weapon, the rise of which is extremely
uncomfortable for the representatives of the West. For the West, what is most important is instilling a dualistic scheme in the
public consciousness in which reformists and the supporters of change stand on the one hand against conservatives, the
stubborn supporters of the past, on the other. As long as this equation is presented in such a way, then definite support is
assured for the Westernizing reformers. But all that is necessary is to introduce a third element into this formula, and the
picture becomes much more interesting. Besides the Westernizing modernists and anti-Western anti-modernists, whose
confrontation always leads sooner or later to the victory of the reformers supposedly embodying the future, there appear the
anti-Western modernists or conservative revolutionaries. The very fact of such a force as an independent platform, ideological
bloc, economic model, and cultural front sharply aggravates the proportions of otherwise banal political confrontation. The antiWestern modernists stand for radical reforms, revolutionary changes to economic models, the explosive rotation of elites in vital
spheres of governance, and the large-scale modernization of all spheres of life. But, on this note, the complete preservation of
geopolitical, economic, and cultural sovereignty, the return to ones roots, and support for identity remain an absolute and
nonnegotiable condition. For them, both conditions modernization and sovereignty remain absolute imperatives which are
not to be compromised under any circumstances.
In fact, even in the modern world we see various civilizational pockets in which individual peoples and countries continue to insist
on preserving their identity despite all considerations of political expediency or economic efficiency. Serbia, Iraq, Iran, Sudan,
North Korea, Libya, and Cuba are examples of such. Possessing insufficient conditions for compete autarchy, however, these
regimes bear the costs of enormous sacrifices to defend their identity, opt for direct and extremely costly confrontation with
the West by rejecting its diktat. The drawbacks of withholding autonomy could be easily overcome in the case of such an
enormous formation as Russia, together with some friendly CIS countries and certain states of the far abroad.
The question lies only in political will and determination. The guaranteeing of resources is secondary in this case. Let us refer to
the following example: in Republika Srpska in Bosnia, when I asked what was preventing the reaching of a truce in a specific area,
I received an astonishing response from a volunteer militiaman: That there mountain, that little mountain, is famous in Serbian
chronicles from the Middle Ages. Now she is in the hands of the enemies. Theres nothing on it no strategic points, no useful
minerals, no industrial enterprises its just a piece of land. But a piece of Serbian land. Weve already buried several hundred of
our fighters there. Weve been offered peace in exchange for that damned mountain. But we wont accept such a peace. We need
that mountain. That useless mountain
The very fact of national history and the span of national territory are fully comparable to the most serious utilitarian,
technological, and economic parameters. Moreover, for most nations, such are worth even more life.
The Conservative Revolution the last imperative
Modernization without Westernization should become the main slogan of a new course which should unite the best forces
from both the conservative and reformist camps. This new platform, if carefully developed and rigorously implanted in the
consciousness of the masses, could instantly clear up a number of dark spots in our political and economic lives. Together with
this, the subversive nature of the actives of those forces which either deny the necessity of reforms (the apologists of nostalgia
and stagnation) or deny the necessity of submitting reforms to the national, geopolitical, civilizational, and cultural imperative
(the agents of Western influence) will become obvious. Accordingly, in our critical situation, both of these groups should be kicked
out of the political establishment and the central ideological, economic, and conceptual initiative should be delegated to the
newly established front of conservative revolutionaries.
http://www.eurasianistarchive.com/author/alexander-dugin/modernization-w...
Translator: Jafe Arnold
Chapter 7 from The Russian Thing Vol. 1 (Moscow, Arktogeya: 2001)