Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 25 – Most people in
Moscow and the West see Russia’s current political problems as a working out of
the events of 1991, a view that very much defines what they are doing and what
they expect to happen next, according to Vladimir Pastukhov, perhaps the most
penetrating analyst writing on Russia today
But in fact, the St. Antony’s College scholar argues, the events
of 1953 are more significant not just for the 40 years that followed and the
way the Soviet Union ended but also for the mistakes that Vladimir Putin’s
regime is making and the consensus that is likely to emerge in the coming
decades (novayagazeta.ru/politics/59626.html).
Pastukhov begins his argument by
suggesting that “the extraordinary ease” with which the Soviet empire came
apart in1991 was less about the decisions taken by Mikhail Gorbachev or anyone
else than an event “pre-determined by another revolutionary turning point which
happened 40 years earlier, following the death of Soviet dictator Joseph
Stalin.
Stalin
died without having chosen a successor, and consequently, “at the top of the
pyramid of power, there were several leaders, each of which in equal degree
could compete for the top post.” But what determined the outcome of that fight were
less the personal characteristics of the two most significant figures than the
very different attitudes they had toward the revolution and the use of force.
The
widely-accepted image of Lavrenty Beria as a primitive savage drenched in blood
as one of Stalin’s chief executioners and Nikita Khrushchev as a willful but
clever initiator of “’de-Stalinization’” are not only “far from reality” but
get in the way of understanding what happened in that year and in the decades
that followed.
If
anything, these two figures represented just the reverse of what most usually
think. Beria took the lead in moving to overturn many of Stalin’s actions, including
the so-called “doctors’ plot.’” And he pushed for a massive amnesty,
limitations on the party’s interference in government and the economy, the
unification of Germany, and even “the limitation of the forced Russification of
the national borderlands.”
From
this distance, Pastukhov says, “it is clear that [Beria’s] most radical
proposals … anticipated the domestic and foreign policy initiatives of
Gorbachev.”
Both
because and despite these ideas, others at the top of the Soviet leadership
in1953 denounced Beria for “all the mortal communist sins,” an action that
allowed Khrushchev to defeat him and one that represented “the victory of
hypocrisy over cynicism.”
Beria
was a complete cynic who was prepared to adopt any policy as long as it helped
preserve what he considered the most important thing “the holy right to the use
of terror” as the chief mechanism of power and something all the other leaders
at that time feared with good reason that he would use against them just as
Stalin had.
Unlike
Beria, these other leaders had “already long ago lost the ability to conceive
the world as it was.” The only time when they appeared to be acting naturally
was when they spoke about their fears of Beria, and thus even though he held
more cards in the game than they did, they had “on their side historical
justice.”
Consequently,
Pastukhov continues, what happened in 1953 “was not so much a clash between
Beria and Khrushchev personally as a clash between two political courses,” between one that wanted to rely on force as “the
universal method of resolving tasks” and another that sought to “keep that
genie in the bottle” and “limit the application of force.”
Beria
could propose any number of “correct decisions,” but he “could not offer any
guarantee of a defense against arbitrary actions.” Khrushchev and his allies
could. And consequently, “if one considers this struggle from an even broader
point of view, then one is talking about the continuation or the completion of
the revolution.”
Beria
was “prepared to sacrifice the banner of the revolution in order to preserve
force,” while Khrushchev preferred to preserve “the banner of the revolution by
sacrificing the spirit of force of this revolution.” Neither man would have
recognized this, but that is irrelevant to an understanding of what they did
and how their actions mattered.
Had
Beria won and continued to use arbitrary force, the country would have suffered
a rapid and destructive catastrophe” and would brought forward in time “the
inevitable destruction of Soviet statehood.” Thus, Pastukhov says, “the four
victorious days of August 1991 were predetermined by the four opportunist
decades which Khrushchev gave Russia in June 1953.”
Those
four decades and not the preceding ones are what people are referring to when
they speak of “’Soviet civilization,’” a hybrid of revolutionary slogans
without the kind of force that had made the system work earlier and one that
was “condemned” to die “with Gorbachev or without him.”
“The
Soviet system was for a sick Russian society functional in the same way that
drugs are for a sick individual.” They
kept the pain at manageable levels, but “when the drugs ceased to work,” the
whole structure collapsed and the country had to begin again to face “the
unresolved tasks” of the 1917 revolution.
That
is what Russia and Russians are having to do now, the scholar says, and that is
why “for contemporary Russia” what is most important is “not so much 1991 as
its predecessor 1953.”
“The
fourth Russian revolution still has not stopped for a second. The “wild ‘90s”
were a time of revolutionary destruction “of all existing relations and
stereotypes and the forcible redistribution of property and power.” When he came
to power, Putin, “under the flag of counter-revolution,” did not eliminate
arbitrariness but gave the use of force “a more or less organized character.”
After
“more than two decades” of “unceasing terror without rights and law,” a new “political
consensus against state arbitrariness” is again emerging among Russians. More
than anything else that is “the real national idea of the next decade.” What
remains unclear is “who and under what circumstances will become the expression
of this consensus.”
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