Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 20 – Neither sanctions,
nor international isolation nor the domestic opposition will lead to the fall
of “the harshly authoritarian and semi-totalitarian regime” that is Vladimir
Putin’s, according to Andrey Illarionov. It was pass from the scene only “as
the result of a military defeat abroad.
After such a defeat, “the chances
for the replacement of the regime will increase sharply,” and in support of his
argument he points to a series of cases in Russian history ranging from the Time
of Troubles in the early 17th century to the defeats in the Afghan
and Cold wars at the end of the 20th (golos-ameriki.ru/content/fatima-tlisova-illarionov-interview/3009058.html
and kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5625CFF20F6B2).
Today, the Russian analyst
continues, “the level of support for the regime by Russians remains significant
and the opposition has been marginalized,” a reflection of the fact that
regimes like Putin’s “operate above all on effectively functioning mechanisms
of propaganda and terror.”
As long as those “machines” continue
to work – “regardless of the situation of the economy, social sphere, education,
health or anything else – the regime will maintain a high level of stability.
Now in Russia,” Illarionov continues, “both these machines work almost without
any problems.”
Thus, he says, “the replacement of
the current Russian regime hardly will take place as a result of the crisis, a
growth of social tension, a decline in the price of oil, foreign sanctions or a
coup in the ruling hierarchy. The replacement of such regimes if it happens at
all is the result of defeat abroad.”
To a certain extent, Illarionov
says, “the Kremlin regime suffered defeat both in Georgia and in Ukraine” if
one compares the Kremlin’s goals and what Russia achieved. “However from the
point of view of a large part of the Russian population, these were not
defeats,” but something else entirely.
Illarionov’s argument recalls those
of some of the early theorists of totalitarianism who suggested that such
regimes could keep themselves in power more or less indefinitely unless they
were defeated in a foreign war. Many of
these later changed their minds, suggesting that economic change could force
regime change as well.
But there is one more reason to be
certain that the Putin regime will eventually disappear. Putin is not, despite
what some of his supporters appear to think, a god; and he will not live
forever. And there seems little chance
that even he can create a system that will replace him after his death with
someone who will rule in just the same way he does.
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