Paul Goble
Staunton,
April 25 – Many of the apparent contradictions in Russia today, Lilia Shevtsova
says, can be explained by the fact that Vladimir Putin and his regime have
entered what Argentinian political scientist Guilliermo O’Donnell once called “the
impotence of omnipotence,” the gradual loss of power by leaders who remain in
office for a long time.
In
a wide-ranging interview with News.Online.UA, the Russian analyst says that “the
unlimited power” that the Kremlin leader had enjoyed has now degenerated in the
ways O’Donnell found was characteristic of South American dictators who were in
office for extended periods (news.online.ua/740581/liliya-shevtsova/).
In
the case of ever more issues, Shevtsova continues, Putin can’t solve problems
on his own but is forced to meet with others as in the case of wage arrears or
recognize that he cannot do anything – such as fighting corruption – even though
it threatens his power vertical. To do
so, he would have to open up of the system that would threaten it and him in
other ways.
Moreover,
despite Crimea, Putin does not have the mass support he did. While his approval
ratings remain high although lower than they were, ever more Russians say that
they are not happy with what is going on in their country. “And Putin himself
does not believe he has mass support – otherwise why would he create his own
National Guard?”
But
more is at work, the Russian commentator says, that just the psychology of the leader.
There is “the logic of one-man rule at the stage of exhaustion, which pushes
the leader to this or that set of actions. At a certain stage,” she continues, “authoritarian
leaders become hostages of their own regimes.”
Some of Shevtsova’s most interesting
comments concern Ukraine. She argues that “any Russian leader, functioning in a
system of autocracy could not be indifferent to the flight of Ukraine” away
from Moscow, given that from his point of view this represents “an amputation
of an important element of Russian statehood.”
But more than that, the Ukrainian
Maidan demonstrated and confirmed something else: Russia in contrast to Ukraine
is “still not a post-empire but one incompletely dissolved and frozen at that
stage.”
“Of course,” Shevtsova argues, “there
was the hope that the West would ‘swallow’ the annexation of Crimea and Russian
aggression in the Donbas,” adding that in her view, “had Putin known what would
happen” in terms of Ukrainian resistance and Western opposition, he would not
have gone beyond Crimea.
But he did, and that too has
contributed to the process by which “Putin’s power has been transformed into
powerlessness.”
In this new situation, which she
uses Zygmund Bauman’s term “interregnum” to describe, the Russian elite is
trying to find a new balance between restraining the West and cooperating with
it. The Russian political class does not want to give up its access to the
West, but it also does not wan to give up the means it has to produce is wealth
at home.
The West too is seeking a new
balance, Shevtsova suggests, because it fears what would happen if it isolated
a nuclear power and consequently, there will be contacts between them. But –
and this is critically important – “this does not mean a return to the old
model of business as usual.”
Ukraine is a central factor in this
search on both sides, and the results of what Shevtsova calls its “dramatic
experiment” – to “escape the post-Soviet model without having the chance for
rapid membership in the EU and NATO” – is likely to determine far more than
just its position in the world. Ukraine’s “fate may be one of the most serious
challenges for the 21st century.”
Ukraine has a chance to make the
transition to a modern democracy if Western leverage in Ukraine remains strong,
while Russia has much less of a chance in this regard because those in charge
in Russia do not face similar Western influence and know that moving in a
Western direction will compromise their sources of wealth and power.
“The Russian elite has become
European at the level of consumption, but in order to preserve their incomes
and consequently their power,” Shevtsova says, “they must isolate ordinary
Russians from Europe” and from European values.
Thus, “the Kremlin will struggle with Western values inside Russia even
as it tries to achieve compromises with European business and elites.”
Whether Putin and the Russian elite around him
can do so in their now weakened position remains to be seen.
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