Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 27 – When an
individual, a leader or a country takes something personally rather than viewing it as being
in the way of business, that makes the situation far more dangerous because the
usual options others have for countering actions taken on the basis hard-headed calculation fall away.
Still worse, such shifts from a
business-like approach to one driven by personal feelings mean not only that
those who make it are likely to violate their own interests at every step of
the way but also that anything anyone else does will be interpreted by them not
as part of the ebb and flow of life but as a personal challenge – and behave
even worse.
That danger is now very much on view
in Vladimir Putin’s approach to Ukraine, Russian commentator Stanislav Belkovsky says, because
for him, Ukraine is a place where he can take “personal revenge” for the
failures he has suffered there and elsewhere over the past decade (gordonua.com/news/politics/Belkovskiy-Dlya-Putina-Ukraina-territoriya-lichnoy-mesti-strana-gde-on-terpel-sploshnye-neudachi-19907.html).
Speaking at the conference organized
by Mikhail Khodorkovsky in Kyiv about the future of Ukrainian-Russian
relations, Belkovsky argued that one can only understand what Moscow is doing
by paying close attention to the evolution of the psychology of the Kremlin
leader and the political system he has created.
According to the Russian
commentator, Putin has created a situation in which “there are no autonomous
and competent political institutions.
Today, all power belongs to one man, and as is well known, power
corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely, especially if the individual
involved is not completely firm of mind.”
Putin has never been someone guided
by “super-valued ideas,” he continues, and therefore there is little reason to
believe that he “ever had plans for the restoration of the Soviet Union” as
such. Instead, he has been for most of
his presidency simply “the guarantor of the interests of the elites” both at
home and abroad.
“But over the course of this time,
much as changed,” including both Putin and Russia.
Putin has been “a quite successful
president who in his own understanding has gone from victory to victory,”
Belkovsky says, often achieving what others had thought improbable or even
impossible, including most recently the Russian triumph at the Sochi
Olympics.
That has led both his friends and
his enemies to conclude that Russia has to rely on him because there are “no
alternatives” to his rule. As a result, Putin has come to view himself as genuinely
great and irreplaceable and to act less and less as the defender of elites and
more and more as someone who can act on the basis of his own feelings.
And those feelings have changed.
Putin came to power as a moderate Westernizer, and in his view, he has “fulfilled
practically all the obligations to the West which he had assumed” only to have
the West take advantage of Russia’s relative weakness and act without taking
his views into full account.
Nowhere have those feelings been
more manifest and more exacerbated than in Ukraine, Belkovsky says. In 2004, he was certain that the Orange
Revolution would fail. In 2010, he wanted Yuliya Timoshenko and not Viktor
Yanukovich to come to power. And in 2014, the Maidan triumphed, in Putin’s view
because of the actions of the West.
Putin thus resolved to take revenge
on the West and to do so in Ukraine where he had suffered defeats and
humiliations “even if this will threaten Russia with complete isolation. And he
is taking revenge against his on elite which he had long protected and
demanding that it be “at a minimum” loyal even if his actions cost it income
and wealth.
In some respects, Belkovsky says,
Putin is “experiencing a second youth:” He is returning to the foreign policy
issues that he focused on when he was beginning his career and ignoring “the
economic collapse of Russia itself because that is on the periphery of his
consciousness.”
This psychological state means, the
Russian analyst continues, that “Putin cannot and does not want to stop.” Crimea was not enough and neither would be
the Donbass. “To distract the attention of the Russian people from economic collapse
and to force it to accept the growing catastrophe” will require “a permanent
success of foreign policy victories.”
“On the one hand,” Belkovsky says, “Ukraine
for Putin is not a final goal.” But “on
the other, Ukraine is a territory of personal revenge” because in his view so
many of his failures “have been connected mainly with this country.”
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