Troubling Declarations About Alaska Cause Stir, Reflect Russian Sentiment
Shocking, or perhaps more appropriately laughable, statements from a member of Russia's mercenary organization, the Wagner Group, have once again placed Alaska under the spotlight of international politics. The Group's officer, Aleksey Berezutski, issued a bold assertion via social media stating, "Alaska, we will definitely come back to you, Russia!" alongside AI-generated images of Russian paratroopers descending on Alaskan territory.
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This audacious claim rapidly gathered momentum, amassing an enormous audience of over 14 million viewers on X, the social media platform owned by business magnate Elon Musk. Though ostensibly improbable, these statements underscore an increasingly dominant narrative propagated by some Russian factions, including members of the State Duma, Russia's lower house of parliament.
In fact, as early as June 2022, Vyacheslav Volodin, the Speaker of the Russian State Duma, cautioned the U.S. to acknowledge Russia's historical entitlement over Alaska. Volodin twice emphasized the importance of America's recollection of Alaska's initial ownership, a memory that erstwhile belonged to Russia before the land was sold to the United States in 1867 for $7.2 million, a deal formalized in the Treaty of Cession.
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The legitimacy of this sale, entrenched in history though it may be, is currently being questioned in light of recent Russian pronouncements. In an unexpected turn of events in January 2024, Russian President Vladimir Putin provisioned funds for the investigation and registration of Russian properties overseas. These properties encompass territories earlier governed by the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union. Despite the absence of explicit mention of Alaska, numerous military bloggers inferred that this decree targets the discrediting of the 1867 sale.
American officials have largely dismissed such declarations as frivolous. Vedant Patel, Deputy Spokesperson for the State Department, outright ridiculed attempts to question Alaska's allegiance at a recent public briefing, causing the audience to erupt into laughter. Troublingly, Dmitry Medvedev, former Russian President and current Deputy Chairman of Russia's Security Council, belittled the U.S. dismissals. He wrote on social media," We'll just wait for [Alaska's] return any day now. War is now unavoidable", a statement which he casually punctuated with a smiley face emoji.
These comments from Berezutski and Medvedev have sparked apprehensions about the possible misuse of inflammatory speech for domestic politics. Despite their doubtful credibility as genuine military threats, such proclamations appear to manipulate and incite nationalist sentiment amidst Russia's persisting frictions with the West.
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