Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 13 – Personal dictatorships
can survive for a long time as long as they don’t suffer a loss abroad, Andrey
Piontkovsky says; and that is why Vladimir Putin’s “fatal mistake” was not the
Crimean Anschluss which he carried out in pursuit of the narrow goal of keeping
Ukraine out of Europe but his unrealizable pursuit of a broader “Russian world.”
In a commentary on the Szona.org
portal, he points out that “an authoritarian personalist regime cannot survive
an obvious foreign policy defeat regardless of its character.” That is because “such
a defeat automatically desacralizes the leader and destroys the myth about the infallibility
of the leader and his entire project” (szona.org/smertelnyj-namek-na-otstuplenie/).
The same “pitiless logic” which
works in criminal groups works in these cases, Piontkovsky says. A crime boss
who loses isn’t a crime boss any more. And that is why Putin has destroyed the
basis for his future by his actions not so much in Crimea but rather with
regard to his Russian world.
The Russian analyst puts it bluntly:
“The fatal mistake of the Putin regime became not so much even the annexation of
Crimea as its declaration urbi et orbi
in Putin’s significant speech of March 18, 2014 and his further declarations as
the first step in the realization of the ambitious conception of ‘the Russian
world.’”
At first, he writes, Putin has “a
concrete pragmatic task” – “to block the European vector of development of
Ukraine” lest it infect Russian society and undermine his form of rule. He said
nothing about “the historic mission of an ingatherer of Russian lands.” His
goals were “much more modest” – the destruction of the Maidan revolution.
But carried away by “the euphoria of
his Crimean ‘triumph,’” “the ‘good Hitler’ became a hostage” of his own ideas about
a mythical “’Russian world.,” which in
large measure was “a student’s remark” of Hitler’s Third Reich with its ideas
about a divided people, national traitors, genetic codes and so on.
Hitler’s “Thousand-year ‘Third Reich’
lasted 12 years” in all, and only seven years after he occupied the
Sudetenland, Piontkovsky points out. Putin’s “’Russian world’” and his regime
will end “significantly more quickly.”
The reasons Putin was swept away by
the Crimea euphoria are obvious. At first, it appeared that March 18, 2014, was
a replay of August 2, 1914, when “the entire country with flags, banners,
icons, portraits of the tsar, and George tapes stood up before the residence in
Novo-Ogarevo.”
And his nuclear blackmail against the
West, with its cynical question “Are you ready to die for Narva?” initially
appeared to be working, with few in NATO countries prepared to provide military
assistance to the Baltic countries if Putin dispatched his “little green men”
and other forces there.
But very rapidly “Putin’s conception
suffered the most serious defeats in all other directions,” Piontkovsky says.
First and foremost, he argues, this
happened in Ukraine where ethnic Russians refused to follow his lead, where a
civic nation took shape and where its citizens regardless of nationality
conceived what was happening as “a battle of Kievan Rus and the Golden Horde.” Putin who came to power via a war in Chechnya
will thus lose power as a result of the war in Ukraine.
In addition, Putin’s nuclear blackmail
against the West not only failed but backfired.
Putin never intended to start a nuclear war: he simply wanted to split
NATO and discredit the US as a defender of the West as “revenge for the defeat
of the USSR in the Third (cold) world war, just as the second world war was an
attempt by Germany at revenge for its defeat in the first.”
The Kremlin leader had reason to expect he
could get away with this: today’s “hedonistic Europe” has no political figures
of the stature of Churchill and Roosevelt.” But nonetheless, “the collective
Western Chamberlain slowly came to an agreement and all the same found an
adequate response to Moscow’s growing nuclear blackmail.”
The Western alliance put men and
materiel in its eastern member states. “The size of these contingents doesn’t
have great importance.” They are a trip wire, sending the message to Moscow
that any move against these countries would inevitably lead to a response by
the West as a whole.
As a result, “the symbolic presence
of American soldiers near Narva psychologically turned the situation 180
degrees around,” Piontkovsky says. And that means that “the existential
question” of Narva is “now addressed not to the West but to Putin and his
closest business partners.”
“But the very most painful defeat of
Putin’s ideology of ‘the Russian world’ happened in Russia itself.” It had in
fact suffered that defeat a quarter of a century ago when the Russians did not
fight to maintain the Soviet empire the way the Serbs fought to maintain their
mini-empire, Yugoslavia.
There were some in the USSR who
wanted to follow the Serbian course: indeed, the August 1991 coup is best
understood “not as a communist but rather an imperialist” one; and even Gavriil
Popov talked about “the fraternal dismemberment of Ukraine” in ways that
anticipate Putin’s words.
But the Russian people did not
follow this line, and “not only the residents of the former Soviet Union but
the entire world is in many ways obliged by the wisdom and generosity of the
Russian people who were not attracted by the calls of the Yanaevs and the
Popovs about ‘the ingathering of immemorial Russian lands.’”
Talk about a “Russian world” now,
Piontkovsky suggests, “is an insane attempt by an aging dictator to return in a
time machine to 23 years ago and replay the disintegration of the Soviet Union
in a Yugoslav way, prolonging the agony of his rotting kleptocracy … in the
manner of Hitler’s fascism or Stalin’s communism.”
Putin’s attempt is “condemned to
fail above all because the mentality of Russians has not changed over these
years, the short-term euphoria of ‘Crimea is Ours’” notwithstanding.
Consequently, Putin and his entire system are headed for defeat in Ukraine
because of his overreaching.
“Imagine for a minute,” Piontkovsky
says, “that in 1956, the Soviet Union had not been able to suppress the
Hungarian anti-community uprising and that that had succeeded. The USSR would
not have existed for another 35 long years – the communist regimes in Eastern
Europe would have fallen within the year with obvious political consequences
for Moscow.”
“Ukraine for Russia is a factor much
weightier than Hungary was for the USSR,” the Russian commentator says. In
addition, “the Soviet regime had convinced and ideologically motivated
supporters. But Putin’s Russia, lacking mythological covers cannot have such
supporters and defenders in principle.”
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