Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 18 – Vladimir
Putin’s identification with and push for conservative values is less an
expression of his own most deeply held beliefs than a political choice reflecting
his current political needs, two Moscow commentators have argued. And
consequently, they suggest, as the Kremlin leader’s needs change so too will
his commitment to these values.
The Russian president has been
celebrated in some quarters and condemned in others for his promotion of what
he and others call his “conservatism,” but in most cases, those on both sides
of this divide appear to believe that the views he is now backing reflect his
core values rather than a political tactic.
But two Moscow analysts, Pavel
Svyatenkov and Tatyana Stanovaya challenge that assumption and argue in
articles posted online this week that the Russian president’s conservatism is
the product of political calculation more than of deeply held personal
convictions.
In KM.ru, Svyatenkov says that “’the
conservatism’ of the Russian power only covers its liberal essence” and that if
the Kremlin continues to push it, Russian society “sooner or later” will
descend into “nihilism and universal distrust” (km.ru/v-rossii/2014/02/16/pravitelstvo-rossii/732438-konservatizm-rossiiskoi-vlasti-lish-prikryvaet-ee-lib).
The analyst poses the question: “Is
conservatism possible in Russia?” and suggests that despite what one sees on
the Internet or reads in the papers, there is a lot less of it than most
Russians and others assume. Instead, despite the rhetoric, what he calls “the
liberal lobby” continues to dominate in the media and in the government.
But conservatism can be useful, as
the experience of other countries has shown, Svyatenkov says. “Any society can successfully modernize while
preserving the inviolability of its political system and conducting economic
reforms,” as the countries of Southeast Asia and China have shown.
Thus at least “theoretically,” “a
conservative legal dictatorship could be a modernizing one.” But Russia has two problems in that regard.
On the one hand, its economy is based on raw material exports and thus it can
spend money without modernizing, even though “the correct policy would be the
creation of new production and the increase of national income.”
And on the other, unlike the Chinese
who have a rapidly developing economy and the other Asian countries who had
American assistance, Russia can could only on itself. That in turn means, Svyatenkov argues, conservatism
in Russia isn’t real. Instead, it is a “propaganda” cover for what is “a
liberal political regime which has not significantly changed since the 1990s.”
“All the oligarchs (with the
exception of Khodorkovsky) have kept their wealth, [and] all the liberal ministers
remain in their places,” Svyatenkov says. “And this means that the rhetoric of
conservativism [in Russia at least] will gradually burn itself out in the
absence of real reforms.”
That is because Russians can see
that the regime is “not developing the economy” but rather continues to export
oil and gas, all the while “destroying education and science,” under religious
slogans. Even talk about the Great
Fatherland War isn’t working: ever more often references to the official
version elicit smiles among the young.
Genuine conservatism, Svyatenkov
argues, “could serve as the foundation for the modernization of society.” It
doesn’t even require authoritarianism. But the problem is that the Russian
authorities have failed to make clear whether their present conservatism is “a
basis for modernization or simply a means of extending the life of a liberal
regime.”
If the second version is true – and Svyatenkov
clearly believes it is – then “society, sooner or later, will descend into
nihilism and general distrust.” And it will do not not as liberal propagandists
suggest with their references to the existence of”legal nihilism” now but
rather “in the direct sense when the society which has lsot faith in the
authorities takes to the barricades.”
And on Politcom.ru, Tatyana
Stanovaya discusses the ways in which the authorities are using the new
conservatism to crack down on critics in the media and to attempt to get popular
support for their efforts to isolate and then suppress any criticism of the
existing regime (politcom.ru/print.php?id=17189).
“The creation of ‘a correct history’
carries a clearly expressed instrumental character it gives the authorities the
moral right to condemn bearers of an ‘alternative’ point of view and impose ‘sanctions’
on them in the broadest sense be they opposition figures, media outlets, or
other ‘public opinion leaders.’”
Moreover, by moving to create such a
history, Stanovaya says, the regime is simultaneously excluding the possibility
of the discussion of issues it doesn’t want raised such as social justice and
promoting antipathy toward the West as the invariable source of ideas and
values “foreign” to Russia.
She notes that this anti-Western
campaign hasn’t even slackened during the Sochi Olympics. That shouldn’t surprise
anyone given that “even in the late Soviet period, along with reaction, there
existed ‘modernist’ elements as well,” suggesting to outsiders that there was
more diversity than in fact was the case.
In
some respects, Stanovaya adds, the current conservative campaign makes it
appear that “the people” as presented now is little distinguished from “the
understanding of ‘party’ in Soviet propaganda.” But in an institutional sense,
the two are very different. Refusal to support the correct point of view now
can create difficulties for people but not block the careers of most.
That
in turn means that “Russian society already is sufficiently contemporary for
neo-corporative models” because “if their imposition gives rise to opposition
which it is impossible to suppression (since there is the ‘Internet space’),
then the model will operate with limited force.”
Indeed,
“in an atomized society, any attempt to impose an ideology will have limited
success: the mechanisms of social mobilization already do not work as they did
in traditional authoritarian societies.” And that means the powers that be will
either have to create the institutions to do that or find that conservative
ideals won’t overcome “the weakness of the Russian economy” or “the limited
nature of [its] resources.”
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