Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 28 – Given that
Russians increasingly have “ceased to believe” in scholarship and turned to conspiracy
theories of one kind or another, Boris Kagarlitsky says, it is perhaps not
surprising that many of them including many in the Russian government have accepted
the latest example of such theories, that of “administered chaos.”
And like so many other such
theories, the director of the Moscow Institute of Globalization and Social
Movements says, they have “borrowed” it from the West where this notion has “periodically
surfaced in the writing of both left-wing and right-wing radicals” (rabkor.ru/likbez/2014/09/25/myth-of-controlled-chaos).
But as also often happened, he continues, in “a
paradoxical way,” in Russia the notion of “administered chaos” has been taken
up primarily by conservatives and other defenders of the existing order, who
have repeated it so often that others have fallen under its influence typically
with sad consequences.
The
concept is simple in the extreme, he says, which may account for its
popularity. According to its backers, “the
United States, now in crisis, is trying to compensate for its weakness by
destabilizing the rest of the world.” But by some miracle, the US is “always
able to preserve control over the situation” and use it to Washington’s
advantage.
For
Russian exponents of this view, “the most dangerous form of chaos and
destabilization” consists of revolutions, but because they believe that, they
fail to distinguish between revolutions which spring from the state of any
particular society and those which are sponsored from outside. As a result, for them, “all revolutions” are created
by the US.
Of
course, Kagarlitsky says, there is some evidence for this notion. If there
weren’t, no one would accept it. But there is a fundamental problem: much of
the instability in the world reflects factors other than American influence,
and the US often isn’t able to deal with that any better than anyone else. In
fact, for Washington, things are becoming “ever more difficult.”
Some
Western writers but few Russian ones have suggested that “there are objective
limits” to administered chaos. But while that may be true, “chaos as such never
was administered in the sense in which conspiracy theorists have understood it.”
It is possible to “influence” chaos, “at times quite effectively,” but it is
impossible to do so in entirely predictable ways.
If
the situations were otherwise, they would not be chaos, Kagarlitsky points out.
What
in fact the US has been doing, he suggests, is pursuing a foreign policy that is
intended to reduce to a minimum the problems disorder can cause for the United
States. That policy has two principles: “‘empires
have no permanent friends only continuing interests’” and “‘one must not put
all one’s eggs in one basket.’”
Washington
shifted to that approach at the end of the 1970s, copying much of it from the
British. Instead of saying it will
defend anyone “to the last” in the name of fighting communism, the US began to
bob and weave, backing now one side and then another as the balance of strength
shifted.
At
present, this flexibility reflects the combination of two principles,
Kagarlitsky says. On the one hand, Washington is prepared to “support any
authoritarian regime” in the name of fighting terrorism. But on the other, it
has not given up the idea of promoting “more democracy” anywhere or restricting
itself as to “the ways and means” of doing so.
The British did this with great
success, but the Americans have done so with much less, he continues. The
reason is that “the present-day American State Department does not have either the
experience of that diplomatic culture which was always characteristic for the
British foreign office.”
“The foreign policy of the British
Empire, even while being extremely cynical, permitted it to maintain its
reputation while avoiding accusations of a complete lack of principles,” the
Moscow analyst says. The Americans have been much less successful in that
regard. Their “imperialism” simply isn’t
as skillful as that of the British in the past.
As a result, he says, the US has
suffered “practically an uninterrupted series of defeats in all directions of
world policy,” but because of its “unprincipled flexibility and willingness
constantly to change allies and spend enormous sums,” Washington often has been
able to conceal its losses, especially among those who believe in the doctrine
of administered chaos.
This can’t go on forever,
Kagarlitsky says, and he suggests that “it is completely possible that
precisely the events which are taking place now in Ukraine and in Russia will
in this sense prove to be a turning point” which Russians will be able to see
if they give up their fascination with conspiracy theories.
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