Paul Goble
Staunton, June
23 – Because Vladimir Putin has blocked Russia’s evolution toward democracy,
the Kremlin leader and with him Russia as a whole has lost the chance for a
peaceful and orderly succession, Boris Akunin says. Instead, the Putin era
“will in any case end badly,” either via “a palace coup or a social explosion” since
“the people do not have any other option.”
In an interview to Deutsche Welle while
he was in Germany for a conference, the prominent Russian writer argued that
this unfortunate prognosis reflects two realities: no one can run an enormous
country for long in the 21st century by dictatorial means alone, and
Putin and his regime have failed to understand that or its obvious consequences
for themselves.
The original interview (in Russian)
is available at dw.de/%D0%B1%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%B8%D1%81-%D0%B0%D0%BA%D1%83%D0%BD%D0%B8%D0%BD-%D0%BF%D1%83%D1%82%D0%B8%D0%BD-%D0%B2-%D0%BB%D1%8E%D0%B1%D0%BE%D0%BC-%D1%81%D0%BB%D1%83%D1%87%D0%B0%D0%B5-%D0%B7%D0%B0%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%BD%D1%87%D0%B8%D1%82-%D0%BF%D0%BB%D0%BE%D1%85%D0%BE/a-17716883. A useful summary of its contents can be found at newsru.com/cinema/19jun2014/akuninpu.html.
According to Akunin, the current
situation in Russia is “extraordinarily similar” to the Russia of 1905-1914.
Now, as then, there was “an advance of reaction, a return to archaic forms, a
harshening of morals, and a demonization of opponents.” There was and is “an
outburst of hurrah patriotism.” And there is and was a sense that a revolution will
not be long in coming.
Russia’s current “autocratic regime
is archaic and ineffective. It simply cannot administer such a large and
complicated country. It is economically and organizationally ineffective”
because in the 21st century it is impossible to run Russia out of a
single pocket, without the mechanisms of social control, constraints and
divisions of power.”
“All this with bankruptcy, above all
in the economic sphere,” he continues.
There is no fundamental
contradiction between having a strong state and making the transition to
democracy. Indeed, in many countries and it Russia as well, a strong state is a
requirement at least in the transition period. “But it must not be so harshly
centralized;” there must be real federalism.”
Because Russians are financially
better off, they are not going to go into the streets the way Ukrainians have,
he continues. Russians who do so now go into the streets “not for economic
reasons but for ethical and esthetic ones,” but “no esthetic movement can be
especially strong politically.”
In other comments, Akunin suggested
that Putin’s support is not as deep, unified or long-lasting as many believe.
Some support him because they really believe in what he is doing; some don’t believe
that Russian can be a democracy; and some do so because they are not free to
object lest they lose their positions or worse.
Anti-Ukrainian attitudes are not
widespread or deeply held in Russia, Akunin says. What Russians angry about are
many of the same things Ukrainians are, but unlike the Ukrainians, Russians “continue
to think in the 21st century in the categories of the 20th
and thus do not think about direct political action in the same way.
Akunin
says he is pessimistic about the present because “the Russian state is to a
significant degree the successor not of
Byzantine and West European traditions but of those of the Golden Horde,” a
reality that gave Russia many positive things but not democracy, and “when we
speak about” the differences between Europe and non-Europe, we are talking
about “democracy or no democracy.”
But
he adds that he is more optimistic about the future because underlying forces
will ultimately transform Russia into a more democratic state, one with “real
federalism, important democratic institutions,” a free media and independent
courts. Unfortunately, that day may not come anytime soon.
The
Russian writer says that at present Russia has the mental age of 15 or 16, a
time when hormones are ragingg, when an individual has not yet learned to
discipline himself or to understand personal responsibility. “But the main thing is that he poorly
understands the consequences of his actions.” In short, Russians are a nation
which has not reached adulthood.
Akunin has been raising these issues for
several months. In a blog post in March, for example, he argued that what has
happened in Russia under Putin has been “a transition from a plutocratic
autocracy to a police state and dictatorship,” something he said Russians had
not yet been willing to show the courage to oppose (blog.newsru.com/article/03Mar2014/rules).
He is from alone in offering this
diagnosis of the Putin regime. Historian Andrey Medushevsky, for example, is
arguing that “President Putin received from President Yeltsin almost monarchical
authority ... and in fact, under Putin, only a military coup could change
something in the existing ‘constitutional government’ without a system of ‘checks
and balances’” (http://www.kasparov.ru/material.php?id=53A008DB89BBD).
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