Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 8 – While he is
unlikely to use the term itself, Vladimir Putin has little choice but to return
to the ideas of National Bolshevism, an ideological trend from the 1920s whose
followers combined a rightist commitment to the powers of the state with a
leftist one to a greater role for the state in the economy if he is to save
himself and Russia as well.
In the current
issue of “Zavtra,” Valery Korovin, director of the Moscow Center for
Geopolitical Expertise and a member of the extremely influential Izborsky Club,
makes exactly that argument in some detail (zavtra.ru/content/view/putin-kak-natsional-bolshevik/).
On the importance of the Izborsky Club, see css.ethz.ch/publications/pdfs/RAD-135.pdf).
“Of course,” he says, Putin probably
will never employ this term because of its somewhat “odious” history. But there can be little doubt that he and
those around him now feel compelled to “study the heritage of the National Bolsheviks
as elaborated at the beginning of the 20th century” as an
ideological basis for the contemporary Russian state.
National Bolshevism of that time,
Korovin recalls, combined support for the integrity of the state as demanded by
the White Movement with the socialist economic and political arrangements
instituted by the “Red Bolshevik state project.” And that combination, albeit
under new terms, is needed to keep Putin in power and “to preserve the country.”
The Izborsky Club member begins his
argument on this point with an insistence that “liberalism or in ideological
terms liberal democracy which puts the individual and his interests at the
center of things has been the main threat to [Russian] statehood over the
course of the last two centuries.”
Because “liberalism elevates the
particular over the general and the individual over the whole,” he continues, it
“contradicts the worldview of the Russian majority.” Thus, Russian leaders must reject liberalism’s
“leftist” politics in which the individual has the highest value and its “rightist”
economics which gives “unlimited power to the market and private property.
In their pure forms, neither the leftist
ideology of Marxism nor the rightist policies of liberalism are sufficient to
meet the task of rejecting liberalism “with its threat to the existence of the
state as such.” Instead, Korovin argues,
what is needed is just the reverse: “the domination of leftist economics and
rightist politics.”
That is especially the case because
Russia has never been a nation state on the European model. Instead, it has
been and remains “an empire, that is, a combination of all social models, from
ethnic through collective subjectivity of the big people to elements of the
presence of a political nation in the cities and an eccentric civil society in
the megalopolises.”
A century ago, “in a completely
surprising and metaphysical way,” a group of writers led by Nikolay Ustryalov
and Petr Savitsky, who came to be known as the National Bolsheviks, recognized
the need to combine the rightist commitment to a powerful imperial state and a
leftist commitment to a socialist economic system.
Although they were denounced by the
Soviet government and generally ignored by others, these National Bolsheviks or
more precisely the logic behind their arguments, Korovin insists, had enormous
influence and explain the rise of Stalin as “a national leader” who combined
both rightist politics and leftist social programs.
Bolshevism, the Izborsky Club member
notes, represented the leftist element in this combination, but “over the
course of all of Soviet history in the ideological model of the Soviet period,
the rightist element of placing a high value on the state as such was retained”
and indeed has continued even now.
If one considers the current situation,
one can see that “Vladimir Putin when he came to power already in his first
term began to lay out his policy as a rejection of liberalism” of the kind offered
by Yeltsin. By so doing, the Russian president “moved toward the rightist
model, toward the ‘White’ model” that the National Bolsheviks had supported.
During his first two terms, in fact,
Putin was “a thoroughgoing supporter of the market but at the same time a great
power advocate.” His “liberal patriotism” was “a purely rightist ideological
model with its markets and great power focus.” But the liberal market elements
have proved destructive, and Putin is being forced to move away from them.
Putin is getting rid of these
liberal elements, but that does not mean he is turning to fascism as some
think. “In principle,” Korovin insists, that ideology is “impossible in Russia.”
However,
in making this turn, Putin has found himself without a clearly defined
ideology, something he and the country needs if he and it are to go forward.
Indeed, the Izborsky Club member
continues, Putin has now found himself at a dead end with regard to his “’White’
ideology of liberal patriotism.’” And he will continue to do so unless he adds
to that the leftist economics that National Bolshevism accepted and even
promoted in the past.
According to Korovin, “Putin is a
realist not only in foreign politics but as is becoming ever more evident in
domestic politics as well.” His realism reflects his commitment to the values
of the state over those of ideological “preferences’” and his effort to “balance
between right and left” as a way of preserving his rule.
But such a position cannot continue
indefinitely, the commentator says, and without a clearly expressed ideology,
its failure and his is “only a question of time.” Consequently, the Russian
president must base himself “on a leftist economics and a rightist politics” –
the combination offered by the National Bolsheviks and implemented by Stalin.
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