Paul Goble
Staunton, April 29 – Despite
threatening language, Vladimir Putin is not going to start a nuclear war,
according to Yury Shvets, who studied along with him at the KGB’s Andropov
Institute. Putin’s only desire is to remain in power for life, he says, and he
knows Russia’s delivery systems aren’t accurate enough for a first strike that
would not result in national suicide.
But Putin’s actions threaten the future
of Russia, Shvets says, because his aggressive behavior has reinvigorated NATO,
undermined the possibility that the Russian economy can modernize and develop,
and likely guaranteed that the United States will choose a second Ronald Reagan
in 2016 to contain his country, reducing its importance and possibly its size.
Shvets, who studied with Putin and
then worked under TASS cover as a KGB officer in Washington in the 1980s,
offered these and many other observations about his former colleague, someone whose
KGB career, he says, showed him to be below average in competence and whose
presidential career reflects the skill of others in using television to boost
any leader.
All these are contained in a long
interview he gave to the Ukrainian Gordon News Agency, available at gordonua.com/publications/Sokursnik-Putina-eks-razvedchik-KGB-Vy-serezno-dumaete-chto-Putin-delayushchiy-podtyazhku-lica-razvyazhet-yadernuyu-voynu-U-nego-ot-straha-botoks-potechet-77899.html.
According to Shvets, “now the chief strategic
conflict of Russia is the one between the striving of Putin to remain in place
until his death and the objective requirements of the country for normal
development.” If he succeeds in staying in office for long, “Russia will either
fall apart or be converted into a third-tier state like North Korea or
Mongolia.”
Like its Soviet predecessor, Shvets
continues, the Putin elite is terrified of the possibility that there will be a
popular revolt, one that would sweep them from power and lead to its members
being hanged from lamp posts “as it was in Budapest during the anti-Soviet uprising
in 1956.”
The former KGB officer says that the
probability of Putin pushing the nuclear button is “nil.” Even more than the Soviet Union, the Russian
Federation lacks the reliable counter-force delivery vehicles which could take
out an opponent’s nuclear capacity and prevent a response. It could hit cities, but in that case, the
response would be devastating for Russia.
But there is a more serious reason
for thinking Putin won’t start a nuclear war whatever he says. “Do you
seriously think,” he challenges his interview, “that a man who annually
disappears from public view for seven to ten days in order to have a facelift
and to fill himself up with Botox is capable of unleashing a nuclear war?”
That doesn’t mean that he will not
continue to threaten to do so, especially at present, Shvets says. “The current standoff of Washington and
Moscow reminds one of the US-USSR relationship of the end of the 1970s. America was then led by liberal and soft Jimmy
Carter,” something Moscow could have used to reach agreements.
But instead, Moscow invaded
Afghanistan and put new missiles in Europe. “As a result, after Carter, the
tough Ronald Reagan became president” and adopted a harder line against
Moscow. That provides the Soviet
siloviki with the chance to frighten their colleagues on the Politburo and
extract more money, power and glory from them.
And they were assisted in this by
the Soviet intelligence services. Anyone who reported anything less than the
notion that Reagan was about to attack the USSR was ignored and sidelined, and
consequently, all the intelligence that did make its way to the stop reinforced
the view of the hardliners.
“As a result,” Shvets says, “two
parallel realities arose in the USSR” – an invented one that served the
domestic interests of part of the elite and “real life in the country and
abroad.” At a certain point, a gap arose in such a way that the elite “occupied
itself with virtual threats but the economy of the state fell apart,” with the USSR
following in 1991.
Exactly the same
thing is taking place in Russia today, he argues. And just as in the Soviet
case, the siloviki near the top are destroying the country. They are pushing
for actions, such as an expanded invasion of Ukraine, that will lead to more
sanctions and more problems for the Russian economy.
Simple logic would dictate against
such a move, but “as the late Berezovsky said, ‘it is difficult to predict the
logic of idiots.’”
Now, thanks to what Putin and his
entourage have been doing, “the fate of Russia to a significant degree depends
on the US president.” If he ends restrictions on the export of gas and oil from
the United States, that alone would drive down world prices and cripple Russia’s
ability to function and survive.
Indeed, “if the West does not lift
sanctions, Russia will collapse in two years.” It won’t be able to produce
enough more oil and gas to compensate for falling prices, and it won’t be
forgiven for using the energy weapon.
Even in Soviet times, the leadership never did that, recognizing that it
would be a two-edged sword.
But however that may be, Putin has
already by his action re-energized NATO and led to the expansion of its forces
near Russia’s borders, exactly the two outcomes that he has declared he is
working to prevent. And “Putin has
already done much to have the next US president become a new Reagan and
containment of Russia for a long time become Washington’s course.”
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