Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 1 – Vladimir
Putin’s support for “the conservative wave in contemporary Russia” is not just
part of his broader effort to set the country’s “silent majority” against the
opposition, Aleksey Makarkin says. It is also a reflection of the Russian
president’s disappointment in the foreign policy course he pursued earlier.
In an essay in today’s “Yezhednevny
zhurnal,” Makarkin, first vice president of the Moscow Center for Political
Technologies and a frequent commentator on political affairs, thus makes an
argument which undercuts all those who dismiss Putin comments they do not like
as being “only” about domestic politics (www.ej.ru/?a=note&id=12631).
During his first two terms, Putin
sought to have Russia included in “’the club of the elect’ into that circle of
countries who exert decisive influence on world processes.” He succeeded in having Russia raised to full
membership in the G-8 and viewed that as “symbolizing the continuity of his
regime with Imperial Russia” and its role in Europe.
As Makarkin notes,
nineteenth-century Russia was very much “part of the system of European
coalitions, be they those of the reactionary Holy Alliance or the Entente in
which monarchist Petersburg interacted with republican Paris.”
Moreover, the commentator continues,
Putin was not only able to overcome Western suspicions about his KGB officer
past, but he succeeded in developing “not simply positive but even friendly
relations with three of his colleagues in ‘the eight,’” including Jacques
Chirac, Gerhard Schroeder, and Silvio Berlusconi.
With such “’friends,’” Makarkin
argues, Putin could be sure that any high-level discussion of issues with which
he was uncomfortable such as “Chechnya, Khodorkovsky, state control of the
media, and pressure on the opposition” would not go very far. Indeed, had
Magnitsky died then, the commentator says, “his death would have been little
noted.”
Moreover, at that time, objective
factors were working in Putin’s and Russia’s favor, not just “subjective ones,”
however important they may have been. Russia had high growth rates, and its
emerging middle class was largely prepared to accept any actions of the
authorities eveb the “odious” ones as an acceptable price for stability and
growth.
But the sense at that time that
“Russia was again becoming a strong world player, played an evil trick on the
authorities,” Makarkin argues. They
really concluded that they “could achieve everything without changing or
adapting to contemporary challenges,” and consequently, they weren’t ready for
the changes the world economic crisis brought.
Now, Russia’s economy has recovered
but it is not doing as well as “an ambitious developing market,” and “the
European ‘friends’ of Putin have left office.” The Russian president hasn’t
been able to get close to their successors, and US President Barak Obama has
made it clear that he preferred working with Dmitry Medvedev, “not the best
recommendation” from Putin’s point of view.
Fluctuations in world prices for
oil, slowing economic growth in Europe, and the natural gas revolution have all
combined to “seriously reduce the role of Russian gas as a powerful foreign
policy instrument” and made it a less certain basis for the expansion of
Russian influence in the world than it had appeared only a few years ago.
Consequently, the increase in
Russia’s influence internationally, “Putin’s former pride,” turned out to be
“in many respects temporary, Makarkin says. Russia is isolated in the G-8 on
Iraq and Syria, and the Magnitsky Act is a measure of Russia’s and his own
decline. As he certainly knows, no one would ever think of doing the same thing
to Chinese officials.
Increasingly, Makarkin suggests, the West
views Russia “not as a prospective partner which one should not anger
unnecessarily but rather as a country with an archaic economy and an equally
backward political system, thereby undercutting the gains Putin feels he and
Russia made a decade ago.
Putin thus faces a choice, the
analyst continues, “either to retreat having acknowledged the crisis of the
former course or on the contrary [tighten the screws] having calculated that the
course was chosen correctly and the problems reflect” secondary problems “which
it is necessary to overcome.”
For Putin, the first course is “entirely
unacceptable both politically and psychologically.” And “therefore the
reactionary variant has been chosen,” one that highlights rather than minimizes
the distance between Russia under his rule and the “Western mainstream” and
that means he is less interested in international cooperation.
The unspoken reality, however, is
that “isolationism at a time of falling growth, an economy based on raw
materials and conflict with the most dynamic strata of his own society [are] a
dead-end choice.” Russia can proceed
along that path for “a certain time” but not forever “as the sad experience” of the Soviet system
demonstrates.
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