Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 14
– Polls show that many Russians now view their country as once again a great
power as a result of the Crimean Anschluss, but that immediate emotional
response while very real is neither accurate – this action alone is insufficient
for such a status – nor likely to be any longer lasting than the boost Vladimir
Putin got from the Sochi Olympiad.
In an article in “Gazeta” yesterday,
Igor Nikolayev, the director of the FBK Institute for Strategic Analysis, says
that Vladimir Putin’s actions in Crimea have clearly been sufficient for many
Russians to conclude that Russia is now a great power but argues that they are
not sufficient to make it one (gazeta.ru/comments/column/nikolaev/s62993/6027741.shtml).
The most
disturbing aspect of this popular view, the financial analyst says, is that
Russians have changed their definition of what constitutes a great power. As recently as 2002, a majority said Russia would
have to have a flourishing economy with a rising standard of living to be one.
But Russia has not achieved those
things. Its economy is entering recession as those of other countries are
growing, and its per capita purchasing power now ranks it not even in the top
50 countries of the world. And consequently, Russians have now accepted the
idea that they can be a great power without that as long as other countries fear
Russian military power.
“When the well-being of the
population ceases to be an important criterion of great power status,”
Nikolayev says, “the country is entering a new path of development. Budgetary
priorities are shifted: defense and law enforcement rise to the top. And this
in turn and in an entirely natural way provokes geopolitical activity which is
far from always justified.”
This shift in priorities also
undercuts the development of democratic institutions, as Russians have seen
over the last several years, and it has reduced the share of those who believe that
Russia needs to promote “a high level of Russian culture” if their country is
to be a great power again.
Nikolayev cites the observation of
German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck that “it is impossible to defeat the
Russians as we have had the opportunity to be convinced more than once. But it
is possible to introduce false values among them and then they will defeat
themselves.”
“I fear,” the financial analyst
suggests, that this is exactly what is happening in Russia now as Russia moves
along “the path of least resistance: powerful armed forces so that others will
fear it.”
It is of course difficult to create
a powerful economy and a high standard of living, he notes. And it is dangerous
to deceive oneself that many of the achievements in a wide variety of spheres
that Russians now claim as their own recent ones were in fact not the result of
their efforts but of the Soviet past.
That has led to an increasing
reliance on spectacles: The Sochi Olympiad indeed made an impression on the world,
but that impression rapidly dissipated, and after a few weeks, “nothing
remained from this powerful positive effect.” Nothing except one thing:
Russians began to think of themselves as a world power even though no one else
does.
Nikolayev says that he is “far from
certain” that Russia needs to be a great power at least anytime soon. But he concludes by saying that “achieving
that status will be much more difficult” than many think. “It is thus much simpler simply to change ‘Russia’”
and assume that displays of force are enough.
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