Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 26 – When
Muscovites talk about who might come after Vladimir Putin, they generally assume
it will either be “an even harsher incarnation of ‘Orthodox siloviki’ like
Rogozin or Shoigu or dream as do liberals that it will be Navalny or someone
like him, Aleksey Roshchin says.
But such debates, the Russian political
analyst says, seem to him “extremely naïve” because they are like those which
might have occurred in early 1991 between those who thought Mikhail Gorbachev
would be succeeded by Gennady Yanayaev and those who might have hoped for
Valeriya Novodvorskaya (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5604E9D3EE746).
Such debates, Roshchin continues,
reflect the tendency of people to project into the future whatever trends they
see or would like to see rather than consider whether there are factors that
may cause other trends to emerge and even become predominant. If one thinks
more generally about Russian politics, at least one of these alternative trends
becomes clear.
“In essence,” he says, “the last 15
years in the life of Russia has been an unrelenting struggle of the Center with
the regions, in which the regions have suffered defeat after defeat.” According to many “’experts,’” that is the
way it has always been and “the fate of Russia will thus be defined in a narrow
circle of ‘the capital’s elite.’”
Given that perspective, Russia’s
future choice is limited to either “the Muscovite Rogozin or the Muscovite
Navalny.”
But “the Center cannot get stronger
forever,” Roshchin suggests. “More than that: if one looks carefully, one sees
that in fact this trend has already changed, with the turning point becoming
not ‘Crimea’ but 2011-2012,” when in the wake of mass protests, more parties
were registered and gubernatorial elections again allowed.
This trend is still “weak and little
noted,” he says; and that means that it is a mistake to think that the only
choices will be between a Navalny or a Rogozin. Instead, it is entirely
possible, although perhaps not yet likely, that the individual who succeeds Putin
will come from beyond the ring road.
That happened once in Russia not so long
ago, Roshchin points out, when Boris Yeltsin succeeded Gorbachev. And it is a mistake to assume that it cannot
happen again or that such a change would not have equally dramatic
consequences.
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