Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 29 – The apparent heart
attack on Saturday and at least temporary incapacitation of 78-year-old Uzbek
strongman Islam Karimov has not only sparked concerns in that key Central Asian
country about who will come in his place but also reopens the larger issue of political
transitions in those parts of the former Soviet space governed by dictators.
Twenty-five years ago when the USSR
collapsed, activists in many of these countries and their Western supporters
argued that democracy was the best form of government because it allowed the
people a voice in decisions about their own lives. Far less attention was paid
to the fact that democracies, unlike dictatorships, breed new elites and have
regular successions.
One result of that stress on popular
rule rather than new elites and succession has been that in many cases, many post-Soviet
dictators have hijacked democratic phraseology to cloak what are inherently
undemocratic regimes and by design created situations in which no one can point
to an obvious successor generation or even imagine the departure of the incumbent
ruler.
But even if such leaders are not
replaced by coups or revolutions, they will eventually pass from the scene
because of illness or age. No one lives forever, and if there are no new elites
waiting in the wings or procedures for their regular rotation, transitions will
inevitably be bumpy or even disastrous – a certainty that many dictators invoke
to maintain support for themselves.
Not surprisingly, following the
announcement of Karimov’s hospitalization, his regime and many observers fell
back on the nostrums that everything was under control, that he would be back,
and that his policies would continue (tengrinews.kz/sng/uzbekskaya-politika-silna-svoimi-traditsiyami-normami-301183/).
Other outlets have reproduced
earlier discussions, many extremely useful, about what the passing of Karimov would
mean for Uzbekistan and for other countries involved in Central Asia given the
central role Tashkent plays as the capital of the most populous and arguably
most powerful country there (fergananews.com/articles/9068).
In the coming days, there are likely
to be more of both, but they may soon give way to broader discussions about the
ways in which the reliance of Uzbekistan and some other post-Soviet states on
dictatorial regimes has put delayed action mines under each of them and of the region
as a whole.
Perhaps the first of these has been
offered by Marat Tolibayev, a Kazakh economist and blogger, who argues today
that “when an authoritarian leader of a state leaves unexpectedly, his country
does not experience happiness and well-being, in any cases, not immediately
afterwards” (marat-tolibayev.social/post/361-uhod-diktatora).
In most cases, he writes, the old
dictator is replaced by someone in his entourage or even his family or
alternatively “by an accidental figure who turns out to be in the right place
at the right time.” And he points out
that one does not have to look far in distance or time to see examples of both.
An individual who comes to power out
of the entourage of the old dictator will first proclaim his commitment to
democratic values and criticize “’the cult of personality’” of his predecessor.
But within a short time, he will decide that he and his regime are
irreplaceable and that everything must be done to keep him and it in place,
with force if need be.
As a result, Tolibayev continues,
the regime will remain authoritarian in the extreme and corruption will
flourish: “A narrow stratum of people will become incredibly rich while the
country will remain poor or even become poorer still.” Then, the new leader “will age and depart and
the scenario will be repeated again.”
Alternatively, he argues, the death
or departure of a dictator can provoke a revolution which more often than not
will bring to power either populists without experience in politics or
administration or those who are simply greedy and see political power as a
means to increase their personal wealth.
Neither of these scenarios is “desirable,”
the Kazakh commentator says. And that raises
the question: is there another which avoids the problems of the first and the
second. According to Tolibayev, there is; but it requires some conditions which
are only rarely to be found. The most important of these is a willingness of the
old leader to start the process before he dies.
Indeed, he suggests, the very best
thing a dictator can do is to announce that he is leaving office in five years,
thus opening the way for “a thaw” and for the emergence of alternative
political leaders who will focus on policy issues rather than concentrate
itself only on the replacement of the leader.
Even better, the dictator
anticipating his departure should move away from a presidentialist system,
which only encourages the concentration of power, to a parliamentary one in
which politicians will have to compete over programs more than over
personalities. In it, “the interests of
clans will move into the background.”
If a dictator president can think
about the future – and that is no easy thing for him to do -- his taking those
two steps, Tolibayev says, will ensure that his time in office was not wasted,
that a new dictatorship or a revolutionary situation will not occur. And he will be remembered not for his
misdeeds but for his contribution to the development of his country.
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