Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 12 – Fascism threatens
Russia and even its continued existence as a territorial unit, Vladimir
Pastukhov says, but that threat comes not from marginal “nationalist” groups many
Russian liberals are so worried about but rather from the day-to-day actions of
the Kremlin itself.
In a 2500-word article in yesterday’s “Novaya gazeta,”
Pastukhov, a scholar at St. Antony’s College in Oxford and one of the most penetrating
observers of the contemporary scene lays out his reasons for a conclusion that
many in Russia and the West are certain to find unsettling and therefore likely
to reject out of hand (novayagazeta.ru/politics/61737.htm).
A major reason for that, the scholar
says, is that Russians think of fascism “exclusively” in terms of German Nazism
“one of its more cruel and bloody versions,” rather than recognizing that “fascism
has existed in more ‘vegetarian’ forms,” such as those which were
institutionalized by Mussolini in Italy and Franco in Spain.
Their approach to governance,
Pastukhov continues, which might be called “’soft fascism,’” is one towards
which Russia is moving ever more closely by Moscow’s rejection of liberal
values, chauvinism, a powerful state propaganda machine, persecutionof
minorities, including sexual ones, suppression of independent courts, an
oppressive law enforcement system, and a cult of personality around the leader.
The reasons this is so, he argues,
lie in Russia’s longstanding and highly peculiar relationship to the outside
world, but a clear understanding of that relationship can become the basis for
a passionate liberalism that could challenge Moscow’s drift toward fascism and
disintegration and save Russia from itself.
According to Pastukhov, “Russia has
always depended on the international economic and poliltical conjuncture.” Its
revolutions have occurred when there have been crises abroad, but while the
rest of the world viewed these “transitional,” in Russia, they “as a rule” have
proved to be “a fatal catastrophe.”
“Both the Bolshevik revolution and Gorbachev’s
‘perestroika’ were reactions to global historical tectonic shifts,as a result
of which Europe and the world as a whole became different,” Pastukhov say.”But
Russia itself did not become different: it disappeared” and only later reappeared
in an unrecognizeable shape with unresolved problems old and new.
As a result, the scholar suggests,
Russians developed the habit of viewieng any historical changes in “apocalyptic”
terms.
The current situation is “in this
sense no exception,” Pastukhov argues.
The events of the last two decades and especially those since 2008 are
seen in Russia as evidence of a permanent crisis from which there is no
escape. “Russia does not believe in the
future of the West,” although it has slightly more hope for the East.
But there is little recognition in
Moscow that “iin reality, the changes which are taking place in the world are
far from being of only one kind and not only threaten humanity but also open
before it new horizons.” The breakthroughs in information technologies are “only
the start” of far larger changes in the way people will live and work in the
future.
And “anyone who carefully follows
the life of contemporary Western society knows that the content of this life is
in no way exhausted by this crisis” and that out of it will come not the end of
humanity but a different world for most of its peoples, albeit clearly “not for
all” and perhaps not for Russia.
Russians and especially contemporary
Russian leaders are pessimists, Pastukhov writes. The elites in particular “lack
a romantic imagination: they see the sufferings of the birth [of a new society]
but they do ot hear the cries of the newborn” with all the hopes that those
cries carry with them.
As was the case 150 years ago, “the
Russian consensus is that the West is dying,” a view held across the political
spectrum “from the black hundreds to the radical liberals” and reflecting near
Russian unanimity in their dislike of capitalism.
“But the biggest pessimist in
Russia, of course, is Putin,” who has become convinced that the outside world
is rotting and that Russia must create a citadel to allow it to survive. Hence,
the erection of “a new iron curtain in order not to allow the further
dissemination” inside Russia of what Moscow views as the destructive ideas of capitalism,
liberalism and democracy.
The Kremlin leader appears to think
that he can “sit out the world crisis in this fortress” and “pretend to the role
of the leader of a new Holy Alliance, which would unite all the archaic, tough,
and cannibal regies of the world ... from Venezuela and Iran to Syria, Lybia,
and North Korea.”
(This list, if one compares it with
the one Russia formed for the first Holy Alliance, unintentionally highlights
just how much the world and Russia itself have changed over the last century
and a half, Pastukhov notes in passing.)
But because no one can say just when
the West will collapse according to this scenario, Pastukhov continues, Putin
is arming Russia, “the inevitable consequence of the course taken toward
self-isolation.” “Russia naturally views
the entire world as a potential opponent.” And thus “not Europe but Russia
itself is erecting a ‘cordonne sanitaire’ around itself.”
While this military program may give
a short-term boost to the economy, in the longer term, spending on defense,
giving budgetary constraints made worse by giant spending projects like the
Sochi Olympics, “will lead to the exhaustion of the economy, the growth of its
disproportions, and the degradation of education, science and culture.”
But investments in the military are
inevitably accompanied by the spread of “an ideology of militarization,” which
becomes “in its turn the very shortest path to totalitarianism and fascism.
(Anyone who doesn’t believe this should look on the Internet at television
pictures from North Korea.)” Tragically, Russia has already gone a long way
down this road.
Few Russians or others see this
because they equate fascism with Nazism, which is its most extreme form, rather
than see it as a broader kind of ideology and politics exemplified by Mussolini
and Franco. If they were to consider these regimes, they would see that “all
the signs preceding the formation of ‘soft fascism’ already exist” in Russia
today.
But
even “’’soft’ fascism” is “a catastrophe for Russia.” If institutionalized, Pastukhov
says, that form of governance will open “a direct path to the dismemberment and
destruction of Russia,” outcomes that Putin and his supporters say they are
trying to prevent by implementing their “fortress” ideas.
“By presesrving the archaic features
of Russia, [this form of rule] will deprive society of the chance to develop
and in this way condemn it to still greater technological backwardness and as a
result in the best case to a decades-long crisis of decay,” one that “ooner or
later will bring Russia to a demographic catastrophe.”
Unless Russia turns away from this
path, Pastukhov say, “Russia will not have any chance to control the
territories east of the Urals and perhaps even east of the Volga” in the near
future. Indeed, if Putin’s policies continue to be implemented, by the middle
of this century, Russia as a whole will reach “a point of no return.”
Having lost its eastern possessions,
he says, the new edition of “Muscovy will be converted into an east European Albania,
a depressed territory with an aging industry, ineffective agriculture ... [and]
a corrupt regime, under the control of criminal clans eternally fighting among
themselves.” If that happens, Ukraine will become the dominant geopolitical
player in the region.
Pastukhov points out that all this
is “not a prediction but a warning about one of ht epossible scenarios of
development in the framework of the ideological paradigm that has been
established.” These outcomes are
something Russians can and must struggle against, something they can do only if
they recognize that the Kremlin and not the marginal is the problem.
Russians must recognize, he
continues, that their choice is “beteen fascism and liberalism. Whoever hopes
for a third path is deceiving himself.” But there is a problem: in Russia
today, many assume that fascism doesn’t exist in the consciousness of Russians
but that liberalism does.”
“The preservation of Russia as an independent
and sovereign state in existing or close to existing borders,” he argues, “is
possible only if the liberal project is realized.” But that will require a new and “creative”
Russian liberalism based “not on the conception of human rights, the
iimportance of which no one denies, but on the idea of the national rebirth of
Russia.”
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