Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 28 – Russia has not yet
returned to the Stalinist horrors of 1938 as many fear but rather to those of 1983
when, after 18 years of Brezhnevite stagnation, Yury Andropov, the former head
of the KGB who had become general secretary of the CPSU, tried but failed to
save the USSR, according to Oleg Kashin.
What is on offer now, the Russian
journalist argues, is “not Stalinism but rather a replay of the
Andropovshchina, not 1937 but 1983.”
Some of the obvious parallels – the Olympics, Afghanistan, and the end
of detente -- have been noted, he suggests, but there are other less obvious
but more important ones (svoboda.mobi/a/27883749.html).
After 18 years of Leonid Brezhnev’s
rule in which everyone including those at the top of the nomenklatura
recognized that the USSR was rotting and that something had to be done, Yuri
Andropov came to power, not as a result of some KGB seizure of power but
because the party elite knew that someone had to act to avoid a disaster.
But Andropov got sick and so “instead
of order,” Kashin says, the country had to watch as its leader went on
dialysis. As a result, “the entire
Andropov campaign about the struggle with the Brezhnev nomenklatura and its
habits should be seen as a prelude to the reanimation procedures Andropov was
involved in over the course of his 15 months in power.”
Andropov’s health problems meant
that there couldn’t be a real campaign, “only hysterics.” The specific actions, including the arrests
in the baths, the retirement of Shchelokov, and the Uzbek affair among others,
were not part of some carefully thought out plan but rather actions reflecting
the impulses of the leader.
That is because “in agony, no one is
all powerful, and already now, more than 30 years later, it is time to
recognize that the Andropovshchina was an agony, and that perestroika in its
most insane and fantastic manifestations was programmed in precisely when the
Andropov Central Committee via the hands of state security tried to bring order
to a country beyond help.”
“If one compares all this with
present-day Russia, then there is only one principle difference.” Brezhnev hasn’t
died, but what Russia has now is “funnier” because Putin, a Soviet man par
excellence, combines in himself “Stalinist, Khrushchevite, and Brezhnevite
qualities, that is, he is an autocrat, an eccentric and the master of
stagnation.”
“Putin as Stalin bombed Chechnya,
incarcerated Khodorkovsky, and put off elections. Putin as Khrushchev
entertained his subjects via ‘direct lines,’” and by giving the West the
finger. And Putin as Brezhnev “made friends with viola players and gymnasts,
handed out orders, and did not oppose a cult of personality” or wars in Ukraine
and Syria.
If one extends this analogy, Kashin
says, then “after Putin-Andropov will come and immediately disappear
Putin-Chernenko and after him Putin-Gorbachev, with all the well-known
consequences of that. Perhaps this will be put off for some time by a
Putin-Putin, but that will bring nothing good to the country.
Russians will be pleased by the
punishment of those who flaunt their wealth too much. They will see this as a
kind of justice, and Putin can play to that.
But, he continues, “a nomenklatura state in which power and the nation
exist apart from one another and do not have common interests is condemned to
self-destruction.”
And that pattern, Kashin concludes,
is “already not a game about historical parallels” but rather “a fundamental
principle of the existence of such a state.”
At some point, perestroika will come again and when it does “everything
will fall apart.” One need not help it or try to prevent it, he says. It is
going to happen in any case.
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