Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 29 – Vladimir Pastukhov
says that Putin’s Russia is well on its way to “criminal neo-totalitarianism”
with all the attributes thereof, including terror and a GULAG, and that Russia
will have a chance to become a democracy only after a long period in which it
will be cured of the values that are making this possible.
Interviewed by Polit.ru’s Natalya
Galimova, the St. Antony’s College historian begins by contrasting
authoritarianism, on the one hand, and totalitarianism and neo-totalitarianism,
on the other, with the latter in his view being “a malignant degeneration” of
the former because they require the masses to be involved in their crimes (polit.ru/article/2015/09/28/neototalitarianism/).
“In an authoritarian state,” he
says, “’ugly actions’ are carried out with the silent agreement by the passive
non-participation of the population,” while “in a totalitarian state, [such
actions] are created with the active and effectual participation of the masses,”
reflecting such state’s need that the population be as dependent on the state
as the drug addict is on narcotics.
Responding to his interviewer’s
objection that Russia today lacks a state ideology and a ruling party,
Pastukhov says that it has them but in unaccustomed forms. Thus, instead of a
communist party, there is “a party based on understandings” and in place of
communism, “’black hundreds ideas’ and the like.”
Putin’s Russia is working hard to
include people in the political process, he argues, via things like the
Krymnash movement which very much has an ideology, all of which sets the
current regime apart from “Russia of the ‘90s’” when people were indifferent to
what the state did and thought they had immunity from totalitarianism.
To be sure, Pastukhov says, many of
the “signs of totalitarianism in contemporary Russia exist in a weakened form”
compared to what they were earlier; and that is why, he continues, he prefers
to speak not about totalitarianism in Russia today but rather about “neo-totalitarianism”
and about Russia being on the road that will lead from bad to worse.
To make his point, the Russian
historian tells the following anecdote. A man was in a hospital and when he
wakes he sees that he is being carried off somewhere by the staff. He asks “Where
are you taking me?” They answer: “To the morgue.” He then cries out, “But I am
not yet dead.” And they respond, “We aren’t yet at the morgue.”
Nonetheless, if nothing happens to intervene,
Pastukhov continues, “the ‘logical end’” of this process will be the
establishment of a finished totalitarian state with all its attributes, including
neo-terror and a neo-GULAG” as well as such “lesser” features as totally
controlled borders.
Challenged on this possibility, the
historian responds that “the Russian authorities do not have any internal
limitations” on themselves. The only constraints are external, and
consequently, the powers that be will go as far as they think they need to in
order to maintain their power.
There is no reason to think
that there is a great difference between the 20th century which gave
rise to the classic totalitarian regimes and the 21st, he
argues. Can anyone “seriously think that
contemporary Russians are ‘more cultured’ than Germans of the 1930s? What do we
know that they didn’t?”
Pastukhov says that those who think
the impoverishment of Russians will restrain the state are wrong: “In Russia,
in contrast to the West, the economic situation exerts a minimal impact on how
the people view the authorities.” In
most cases, they will support them even if they are crushed by them.
Indeed, he continues, “a correlation
between an economically poor state of the people and revolution in Russia never
was and never will be.” One could even suggest, Pastukhov says, that a well-fed
and flourishing Russia is more likely to make a revolution than a Russia whose
population has been reduced to the status of the North Koreans.
In other comments, the historian
suggests that Putin decided to return to power because he saw the need for
greater authoritarianism to maintain the system he had set up, that the recognition
of this need predated his return rather than followed it as many commentators
have suggested.
“It turned out,” he says, “that
Medvedev’s liberal policy was incompatible with the preservation of the economic
commanding heights in the hands” of Putin’s entourage and that they decided
Putin needed to return in order to introduce the kind of authoritarian rule
Medvedev was incapable of running.
And as far as Russia’s prospects for
becoming a democratic state are concerned, Pastukhov says that they are “theoretically”
possible but that the existing “criminal neo-totalitarianism” is so horrific
that it won’t be possible to go from it to democracy in a single bound.
Instead, it will involve a length process of transition.
He suggests that Russia if it is to
make such a transition will do so in the Hegelian way, with a “first negation”
and then “a second” one. In the first, Putin will be succeeded by someone who
also lives according to “understandings” rather than law, but these will be
different “understandings.” In the second, the successor would be someone who
lives by law.
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