Paul Goble
Staunton,
March 30 – Most analysts have suggested that sanctions and international
isolation were a cost Vladimir Putin was willing to pay in order to get his way
in Ukraine, but Andrey Lipsky, an editor of “Novaya gazeta,” says that is
exactly backwards: the Kremlin leader wanted isolation and launched his
Ukrainian campaign to get it.
Indeed,
he suggests, Putin’s comments to the FSB leadership last week confirm that
interpretation because they suggest that the Russian president is worried that
further contacts with the outside world could lead to a repetition of the destabilizing
protests of 2011-2012 during the upcoming 2016 and 2018 election seasons (novayagazeta.ru/politics/67833.html).
And to
prevent that from happening and thus to ensure the continuation of his own
power, the “Novaya gazeta” editor argues, Putin is quite prepared to suffer
what he believes will be the short-term costs of sanctions and isolation in
order to ensure his own long-term political survival.
Since
the Crimean Anschluss and the West’s response, Lipsky points out, people in
both Russia and Western capitals have been asking why – why did Putin need to
take a step that he might have been expected to understand in advance would
entail so many costs and bring what seems to others so few benefits?
Clearly,
most of the propagandistic memes – “Russia wants to restore the empire,” “It
must defend Russian speakers from the fascist junta,” and “a desire to seize
the territories of others is in Russia’s blood” – are now explanations but
rather something that must be explained, he continues.
What
else is left? Preventing Ukraine from joining NATO and the West establishing a
base in Sevastopol? “Strengthening the security of the country? The growth of
Russia’s influence in the world? The rallying of the ‘Russian world’? [or]
Consolidation in the framework of a ‘Eurasian project’?
Very
early on, Lipsky says, it became clear that Putin’s policies in Ukraine had done
Russia more harm than good, that Russian influence in the world had declined,
its security had been compromised, that NATO had been reinvigorated under
expanded American influence, and the status of Russian speakers abroad had
gotten worse.
All this
happened not because of the West’s desire to box Russia in but because by Putin’s
actions in Crimea and Ukraine more generally, “Russia violated the [existing
world] order, and the others simply have been defending themselves.” And they
now view Moscow as a dangerous source of instability, “unpredictable and
unprofitable.”
Given
this balance sheet, the commentator says, many have simply decided that Putin
miscalculated, but quite possibly there is a better explanation. His actions in
Ukraine, Lipsky says, are “only a cover for something more essential for the ruling
political command in Russia” – the preservation of its political power.
The
Kremlin leader’s remarks to the FSB last week provide a clear indication of
this. He talked about “attempts by ‘Western special services’ to use Russian
NGOs and ‘politicized unions’ to discredit the authorities and destabilize the
situation in Russia in the course of the 2016 Duma and 2018 presidential
campaigns.”
In
thinking about these words, it is important to remember that “precisely
injustice and falsifications during the Duma elections of 2011 in favor of the
party of power led angry citizens in Moscow and certain other major cities into
the streets,” something that clearly frightened Putin and his entourage and led
to a tightening of the screws.
Increasingly,
this campaign presented the opponents of the regime as “agents” of the West,
something that required presenting the West as an external enemy. Otherwise the
moves against the regime’s domestic opponents could go only so far, at least by
making use of this ideological paradigm, Lipsky suggests.
But
until Crimea, the Kremlin lacked one thing to ensure acceptance by the Russian
population of the equating of the opposition with Western agents and that was “the
mass mobilization and rallying of the population around the existing
authorities. The Ukrainian crisis,” Lipsky says, “and ‘the return of Crimea’
provided this happy possibility.”
Whether
Putin can maintain that without doing something more for any length of time
remains an open question, but it is clearly the case, the “Novaya gazeta”
editor says, that the Kremlin is going to do everything it can to maintain it
through the 2016-2018 “political season by propaganda, the actions of the force
structures, and new legislation.”
Obviously,
“total isolation would not be profitable” for Russia even in pursuit of that
goal, Lipsky says. “But partial, with a limitation of harmful contacts and with
sanctions which mobilize the population … and explain why the economic
situation is deteriorating … is completely useful.”
And
indeed, it may “at the present stage only strengthen the arguments of the regime
which is seeking to go into the new political season” without having to face
any real danger that Putin and his regime will be challenged.
No comments:
Post a Comment