Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 21 – In 1983, Yury
Andropov famously told a plenum of the CPSU Central Committee that “if we speak
openly, we still do not know sufficiently the society in which we live and
work.” The same thing could be said of
Vladimir Putin and his entourage, Vladislav Inozemtsev says.
That should worry the Moscow elite, the
Moscow economist continues, because Andropov’s words came eight years before
the collapse of the USSR, exactly the same amount of time between now and the
completion of Putin’s “last legitimate term in office.” How things will end
this time around, of course, “only time will tell” (snob.ru/selected/entry/109865).
And the elite should be especially
concerned now because what has formed in the wake of the annexation of Crimea
is not a new “consensus” between the regime and an active population but rather
the domination of the authoritarian state over an increasingly passive people.
That will give the illusion of stability, but such illusory stability won’s
last forever.
For most of the first decade of
Putin’s rule, Inozemtsev says, political analysts spoke about “a Putin
consensus,” one based on the willing of the population to sacrifice its
political rights to an ever more authoritarian regime in exchange for
significant improvements in its standard of living.
That “’consensus,’” he continues,
“led to the demise of many political institutions, to violations of the
constitution, and to the elimination of many political freedoms, but at the
same time, it appeared quit stable and survived even the economic crisis of
2008-2009.” But it fell apart in the winter of 2011 when some in society no
longer were willing to take part in it.
Initially, Inozemtsev says, the
authorities appeared to be frightened and began “a certain ‘liberalization.’”
But then they responded in a more typical fashion with “anti-Western hysteria,
aggression against Ukraine, the occupation of Crimea and broad talk about
‘raising [Russia] from its knees.”
The enormous support Putin received
from the population led many analysts to conclude that a new Putin consensus
had been formed not on the basis of an exchange of money for power but rather
reflecting the willingness of the Russian population to support Putin on
patriotic and nationalist grounds.
But the Kremlin’s failures –
Russia’s transformation into an international outcast and the collapse of the
economy – he argues, suggest that no real new consensus has been formed because
the population is not in a position to agree or disagree with the regime about
what it would consist of.
Consequently, to call the support
that Russians supposedly have for Putin evidence of such a consensus is not
something that Inozemtsev says he is prepared to do. The supposed “’second
Putin consensus’” never formed, he argues, because the population has been
excluded from political life completely.
That was Putin’s goal from the
outset, the Moscow economist says, and his “cleansing” of the Russian political
space has achieved his goal. With each passing year, the Russian population is
less inclined to speak out in defense of its own interests or even when its
rights are violated.
“What has taken place in recent
years in Russia,” Inozemtsev says, “is difficult to imagine in any contemporary
country.” The regime does what it wants,
and the population puts up with it. And this has “nothing to do with Crimea or
to ‘rising from one’s knees’ or to anything else which might be considered an
element of ‘social agreement.’”
“Can such a situation be stable?” he
asks. “Yes, but can it be eternal? Hardly.”
The Kremlin’s use of force “over the
voiceless society not only creates within it tensions invisible to the
hierarchy but deprive the powers that be of the real opportunity to retreat or
trade when such things are required.”
Thus, Inozemtsev says, the situation now “does not look as stable and
predictable” as it was in 2010 or even 2013.”
“The political ‘dividing lines’”
have as a result become “’ours-alien,’ ‘friend’-‘enemy’,’ ‘patriot-traitor,’” and those do not permit any compromise by the
regime or, if it becomes active, the population.
And that in turn means, the Moscow
economist concludes, that “a new configuration will not involve the departure
of the president in any specific perspective:
Russia, [instead,] is in the position of Kazakhstan or Uzbekistan, with
only this difference, the issue of who will be the new leader may not arise for
a decade or two.”
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