still, it's a more or less perfect example of countries which coexisted only because there was a tyrant oppressing everyone equally
And look at how successful that was.
uh it was pretty much the most successful socialist as in dictatorial socialist state europe has ever seen and probably will see unless someplace in the nordics flips its shit somehow
it collapsed due to a succession problem, if tito didn't fuck up the bare basics of authoritarianism the country would have probably continued to exist and fared decently well
There are ways of Russia dividing into constituent nations though that do not need to involve ethnic cleansing and violence.
problem is, russians are pretty decent at this whole assimilation business and the number of nations you can divide it into is falling rather swiftly unless you want to do disproportionate kinda things
you've got my interest though, what exactly do you want to divide it into?
That would only happen if the Russian government tried to stop the division from happening. The safest way to do it is to cooperate, as happened for the most part during the collapse of the USSR.
aaaaand the person who allowed that to happen is widely considered a traitor to the motherland
yeah, i know, propaganda, but this is not exactly going to go well unless you figure out a way to drastically change the mindset of a large part of a large country
Notice - when countries were allowed by Russia to become independent things went by without much bloodshed, "much" being the keyword. When Russia tried to stop Chechnya from becoming independent, thousands and thousands of Russians were killed and the Russian nation was traumatised. Let's not even go there with how the Chechens were after that of course.
didn't we already discuss this? it's the difference between warsaw pact-tier states (effectively soviet vassals) and autonomous republics (considered russian territory) which caused the whole chechen mess, and as you pointed out to me before they never got their independence peacefully either - which never got any sort of friendly relations going on, which provoked the second war, really you know this part i shouldn't have to explain
thing is vassals were freed and russian territory suddenly stopping being russian wasn't exactly palatable