Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 19 – As even some
of Vladimir Putin’s defenders have had to acknowledge, the Kremlin leader’s
real power is both illegal and unconstitutional because it rests not on formal
institutions but rather on a secret informal network of special departments and
special sections, much like the arrangements Stalin used in the 1930s,
according to Irina Pavlova.
“One can only imagine how thoroughly
Russian society is ‘penetrated’ by agents of the special services and force
structures,” the Russian historian says, arguing that “it is no exaggeration to
say that the entire population of the country is under their first” and that
this ensures [Putin’s] power” (ivpavlova.blogspot.com/2015/10/blog-post.html).
The occasion for her comments are three
articles by prominent commentator Gleb Pavlovsky, two last week and one from 2010
(http://gefter.ru/archive/16307, http://gefter.ru/archive/16312
and newtimes.ru/articles/detail/17621)
and one by another Moscow analyst, Sergey Tikhonov (expert.ru/expert/2015/40/hoteli-posadok/?285191).
In his three articles, most openly
in the one published earlier but sufficiently clearly in his latest, Pavlovsky
says that what he calls “the Russian system” is not something established by
the constitution or law but rather is centered on Putin who is “an informal
institution” the constitution doesn’t recognize and thus “the supreme authority
of this system.”
Thus, she says, “Mr. Pavlovsky
confirms that the real power in Russia is unconstitutional and consequently
illegal,” and his references to “a keyboard” on which the Kremlin leader plays
the bureaucracy “in essence confirms the existence in the power structure of a
secret infrastructure, a network of staff and non-staff workers of the special
services and force organs.”
Tikhonov provides “by the purest
chance” evidence of the operations of this “conspiratorial power.” In an article in the journal “Expert,” he
writes that “a secret structure with special authorities [has been established,
about which] even the top brass of the Investigative Committee does not have
access.”
The Russian analyst continues that
people jokingly refer to this shadowy group as “SMERSH, by analogy to the
famous Stalinist special service which struggled with enemies via harsh but effective
surgical means.”
“Why such secrecy?” Tikhonov asks. “Why
do even highly placed chiefs of the FSB not know about its existence? For the
very same reasons that operational and investigative structures were created in
the 1930s and 1940s” – to conduct purges in anticipation of war and then to
carry them out during war itself.
At the start of this process, “there
were little party tsars in the localities, former militants of the civil war
whom it was necessary to put in their place and elites who had to be cleansed
and very quickly.” The ordinary legal
structures couldn’t be counted on to do so reliably from the Kremlin’s
perspective because they were too closely tied to those who were to be purged.
Thus the need both for Stalin and for Putin to create “a
special group” which had and has “direct access to the president and personally
reports to the first person of the state about the situation in this or that
region,” Terekhov says. And Pavlova adds
that this is confirmed by the significant role of the All-Russian Popular Front
locally.
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