Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 26 – By his
annexation of Crimea, Vladimir Putin has re-awakened the imperial dimension of
Russian messianism, a force that has been contained since 1991 but that now
will lead to ever-broader conflicts that will lead either to a Russian victory
over all its supposed enemies or the collapse of Russia, Vladimir Pastukhov
says.
But at the same time, another form
of Russian messianism, a concern with universal social justice, is also being
re-awakened, and that represents a potentially even more serious challenge to
Putin’s system than the imperial messianism which because of his victory in
Crimea is making him into “the messiah” for many Russians, the St. Antony’s
College expert adds.
In an article in yesterday’s “Novaya
gazeta,” Pastukhov points out that Russia today is populated by “a different
people” than it was “all of a month ago,” a people who are “inspired” by a
vision which gives them the messianic role that they as a nation have always
craved (novayagazeta.ru/politics/62873.html).
“Russians do not fulfill a mission,
all the more so when it is unfulfillable; they live it and are its function,”
the historian says. Instead, “the
missionary spirit was and apparently remains the moving force of Russian
history.” It is part of “the Russian
subconscious,” and Putin has “re-awakened” in Russians this “beast.”
What is surprising and requires
comment, Pastukhov says, is that this messianism was asleep for “a quarter of a
century,” an “insanely long” period “for the Russian cultural code” and one
that reflects “the deep depression and historical shock which the Russian
people experienced after the disintegration of the USSR.”
But if the messianic spirit was
sleeping, it did not disappear, and one can identify the forces that have
roused it. First among them is the West
and the United States which behaved in ways that have given rise to the Weimar syndrome
which has awoken in the Russian soul the very same instincts which moved the
Germans after their defeat in World War I.”
The winners of the Cold War didn’t
think it necessary to create a new Marshal Plan, he says. They didn’t think
they had to meet the interests of Russia even half-way on “any of the issues
that were psychologically significant” for Russians either within their country
or in their former allies.
Moreover, the West acted in an
extremely “casuistic” way with regard to following “the norms of international
law.” It did when it suited its interests but not when it suited Russia’s or
anyone else’s. And others, like Ukraine,
also made a contribution to re-awakening Russian messianism by their actions as
well.
Indeed, Pastukhov says, today, “one
can assert that in fact during all this time, the cold war did not end for a
minute. It simply became less intensive,
degenerating into cold war light.” In
this world, the Americans pretended to cooperate with the Russians, and the
Russians pretened to share American values.
Both of those acts of pretense were
lies, the St. Antony’s scholar says.
“One can argue as to who in each
specific case was right and who was wrong,” but one can’t dispute that Russians
never came to terms with their defeat and always hoped that they would someday
be able to redress it.
Pastukhov cites the observation of
Leo Tolstoy that “masses of people usually go into motion ecause they are
unified by a certain very simple but universal feeling, at the base of which
lies a single universal interest.” He
called this “’a differential of history,’” and identifying it in Russia was “one
of the chief hidden motifs of the works of Tolstoy himself.”
Since the end of the Soviet Union, “Russia
has been in an uninterrupted search for some kind of ‘new ideology’ which would
awaken the sleeping Russian passion.”
All failed, until it was discovered that “the universal differential of
post-communist Russia was a longing for imperial greatness,” a desire to punish
those who had punished Russia.
That is what Putin has tapped into,
because he felt and recognized that “the people needed a victory,” regardless
of where and but a victory in order to take revenge for Yugoslavia,
Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and Syria. He has gotten this victory but he has
started a process he cannot stop until “all the fuel” behind it is burned up.
Those who think that there will be a
quick end to this are making a most “serious mistake,” Pastukhov says.
“The ‘Russian machine,’” he
continues, “has a broken speedometer and no brakes. It is secure only when it is
not moving.” Western leaders have
described Putin as “inadequate,” Pastukhov continues, but “he is no more
inadequate than Atilla in the eyes of the residents of besieged Rome.” And he
is less so than the leaders of the Old and New World “who do not understand”
that “the conflict is only superficially connected with Ukraine or even more
with Crimea.”
Crimea is “only an occasion” for the
re-igniting of this Russian messianism, Pastukhov points out. “War has been
declared not on Ukraine but on the West, on its policy, ideology, way of life,
values and way of thinking. This is a ‘holy’ war, that is, an ideological and
religious one, which is condemned to become total.”
And it will go on until “the defeat
of the West or the disintegration of Russia,” he suggests. Russia has fewer chances for victory than
does the West, but what happens will in fact depend on many decisions yet to be
made. In this, one cannot exclude that “the only beneficiary of this clash in
the final analysis will be China.
Those who think Putin is going to
stop with Crimea are deceiving themselves. He can’t stop because he cannot make
a concession “to any ‘foreign enemy’ on any issue. Politically, he has driven
himself into a corner.” That doesn’t
mean that there won’t be pauses, but the thrust will continue.
The Kremlin leader, having “united
the people under the flag of revanchism appears today as a Messiah,” Pastukhov
says. Many who opposed him now do not,
and they will support what he does even if they earlier rejected exactly the
same thing. There are not going to be
any mass protests “in the current atmosphere.”
“Of course, any holiday sooner or
later ends. But it is always possible to create a new one.” There are ethnic Russians and Russian
speakers elsewhere, in Moldova, the Baltic countries, Belarus, Kazakhstan “and
in many other places as well.” It is
simply a matter of playing up one or another issue to keep the passion of
messianism alive.
But there is another force at work
too, the Oxford scholar says. “Besides
imperial nostalgia, Russia history has another differential which one might
describe as being of ‘a second order,’ but which is more powerful than the
first: the striving of the Russian people for social justice” both locally an universally.
While it can be used to justify
messianic imperialism, this “differential” can represent a threat to the regime
which launches such campaigns by calling into question the absence of social
justice at home. Such feelings are “the
red button in the Russian soul.” Whoever is able to reach it will “pull the
chair out from under Putin.”
That is because “the real Russia
idea is not imperial; it is the idea of universal justice,” and Russians’ sense
of justice has been and is being violating by Putin’s policies at home. In sum,
“Russian social messianism is stronger than Russian national messianism,” even
if it does not appear that way just now.
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