Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 22 – One of the most
important consequences of the current doping scandal, Kseniya Kirillova says,
is that it undercuts those who currently like to say that Vladimir Putin was moving
in the right direction before he decided to seize Crimea and intervene in Ukraine’s
Donbass, a view that implies a possible easy reversal of today’s ill fortune.
The current scandal shows, the
US-based Russian analyst argues, that “pre-war Russia was different from today’s
much less than [many] had thought and thus the war becomes not an accidental
error but a logical result of the development” of Russia under Putin (nr2.com.ua/blogs/Ksenija_Kirillova/Put-Rossii-ot-podmeny-mochi-k-voyne-122238.html).
To be sure,
Kirillova continues, “the current state of Russian society since the invasion
of Ukraine has changed beyond recognition … ‘Pre-Crimean’ society did not know
such a level of lies and aggression, there weren’t repressions for reposts, all
the insanity of current laws, and so much false propaganda.”
But
despite that, she says, “it would be more precise to say” that with the Crimean
Anschluss, Russia was not changed so much.” Instead, its real nature was put on
display in all its horrific dimensions, dimensions that many had busied
themselves with denying from the first days of Putin’s rule when the apartment
buildings were blown up and the Chechen war restarted.
Russians
and many others besides did not want to face up to the Putin reality from the
outset of “false elections, false democracy, false sports victories, false
stability that crumbled with the first vacillation of oil prices, false love of
peace, and false and repeatedly rewritten history.”
Was there
anything genuine in pre-Crimea Putinist Russia? If there was the same pattern
of crimes that were even more clearly on display after the Anschluss, Kirillova
says. “Only we didn’t notice much of this because it was hidden by more capably
made fakes. But the war tore off all
these former masques” and revealed how fake they were and remain.
That is
why the doping scandal is so important: it focuses the attention of Russians
and the world back to a time when so many assumed that Putin was basically
doing the right thing. Now, there is no basis for anyone to do so. And this loss
of illusions is going to define how Russians and others consider Putin from now
on.
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