Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 5 – Vladimir
Putin’s tolerance of Ramzan Kadyrov and his appointment of an operative as Tula
governor reflect a clever policy by the Kremlin leader to protect himself by keeping
around himself only those so obviously outrageous or incompetent that neither
they nor anyone else will view them as successors, according to Vitaly Portnikov.
Russian rulers from Ivan the Terrible
to Boris Yeltsin have often adopted such a strategy when their own time appears
to be running out because of the failures of their policies and when they “are
afraid even of their own shadow,” the Ukrainian commentator says (mirror578.graniru.info/opinion/portnikov/m.248355.html).
The first oprichniki appeared, he
points out, “when Ivan the Terrible began to suffer defeats in his military
adventures and with horror expected retaliation” from one of the boyars even if
the latter appeared to be completely loyal.
Those he chose to be his oprichniki were in his view at least no threat
to him or his throne.
The last example before the present
one, Portnikov says, is offered by “the late Yeltsin who brought into his inner
circle Korzhakov and Barsukov and almost made their successor ‘their spiritual
father Mr. Soskovets.” Had Yeltsin not
recognized that his time was short, it is far from clear what might have
happened.
He chose Putin and Putin is now
doing the same thing. “As long as [he] was
bold and energetic, as long as oil was at 120 US dollars a barrel and even his military
adventures did not lead him to an immediate collapse, the president could allow
himself the Ivanovs, the Shoygus, the Narshkins, and the Patrushevs.”
While they were prepared to serve
the supreme leader, they were also credible in their own eyes and in others as
successors, Portnikov suggests, and thus they constituted a potential threat to
Putin in his eyes – and thus he has moved in the direction of his predecessors
by elevating the incompetent or the outrageous (or both at once) to his inner
circle.
That is “the only way out for Putin,”
the Ukrainian commentator says, “to surround himself with oprichniki and thus
reduce the influence of those who could replace him in the Kremlin even from the
point of view of administrative competence. Next to the monarch can be only
those who cannot do anything except ride in the front seat and execute
commands.”
As things deteriorate in Russia,
Portnikov suggests, the number of the oprichniki is thus likely to continue to
increase, until for one reason or another the system collapses as a result of
this and its other failings.
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