Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 5 – Vladimir
Putin is with remarkable success using modern political technologies to keep
himself and his increasingly antiquated and decaying system in power, Liliya
Shevtsova says. But he can do so only
for so long, and there are signs that he and his system may not last as long as
many now think.
Not only does Putin face
constitutional limitations as far as terms are concerned – although it is not
unthinkable that he will violate them – he also faces a population with whom
his social contract has collapsed and which increasingly wants something different
from what the Kremlin leader is offering (newsader.com/specialist/liliya-shevcova-o-konce-rossiyskogo-sam/).
If one examines the Russian system,
she suggests, there is every sign of its decline: “It cannot deal with foreign
and domestic challenges. It is not able to guarantee [Russians] not only
development about which [they] have long ago forgotten – but even is having
difficulty preserving the status quo.”
And beneath the surface calm,
Shevtsova argues, “tectonic shifts” are taking place, including protests in the
provinces if not yet in Moscow and the Kremlin’s decision to “throw Russia into
the paradigm of war, a well-known means of distracting attention from social
and economic problems at home.”
Clearly, she says, “the Russian
system has exhausted itself,” although that does not mean that its collapse is
necessarily imminent as some have suggested. “It still has the potential to
survive via mimicry, manipulation, deception, fake elections, and intimidation,
in short, through the use of developed political technologies.”
But even those can work only so long
she suggests, and she points to what happened in 1991 and subsequently as
evidence that “the time of Russian autocracy has already ended,” although its
death agonies may continue for some time to the harm of both the Russian people
and Russia’s neighbors.
A major reason that this is not
understood now, Shevtsova continues, is that most people do not recognized what
happened in 1991. It was “no liberal
revolution.” Instead, it was an effort to rearrange leaders and open the way to
wealth and property. Once Boris Yeltsin came to power, he began, knowing no
other way, “to restore the administrative vertical.”
There was a brief period in which it
appeared that the country might go in a different direction. But Yeltsin’s
actions in 1993 against the parliament and then his pushing through a new
constitution created the foundations for “a new autocracy.” And his arranged
reelection in 1996 ended the relevance of elections in Russia for some time.
Then Yeltsin handed over power to
Vladimir Putin who was quite prepared to work in this authoritarian paradigm
but who chose something “curious” Shevtsova says. He founded “a new model of the regime” on the
triad of the power of the special services, property, and repressive measures
controlled by one and the same person, himself.
According to Shevtsova, “there had
never been such a regime in the framework of the Russian system.” And his
innovations meant that his rule could evolve “only in one direction toward ever
greater concentration of power in his hand and to a return to imperialism,
without which autocracy cannot exist.”
2011 did not represent “the moment
of truth” many imagined, she argues. At that time, “Russian citizens came out
not for the destruction of the system but for its improvement.” They did not
reject “the personalist system of power;” they simply wanted “honest elections and
an independent court system.”
Today, the situation of the Putin
regime and of Russian society is worse. But, Shevtsova reminds, “there have
never been any cases in the history of world civilizations when at a time of
collapse the ruling elite, while controlling all resources, suddenly commits
harikari and opens the way for its self-destruction.”
Given that, she says, it cannot be
excluded that “the replacement of the Putin regime if it does take place will
be only in the name of the self-preservation of the system itself by means of
cadres changing or agreement or through the coming to power of a fake leader”
especially since most Russians still see a personalist regime as the only way
forward.
For real change, Shevtsova says,
there needs to be pressure from the streets, the rise of a powerful opposition
and a split in the elite over the road forward. None of these appears to be in position to
push through a radical change, let alone cooperate with each other. But economic problems and changes in Russian
attitudes may finally lead to that.
Russians are not Ukrainians, she
points out. The latter “are ready to put their lives on the line for modernist
values and a pro-European orientation.” Russians in contrast continue to wait when
they will be offered that by their ruler. But it is already clear that many in
society and “even in part of the elites” are not interested in having the
current system continue forever.
Because that is so, the elections
this year and in 2018 will “in essence complete the former stage in the development
of Russia and open a new one,” although it is far from where what that will
mean. One thing is clear: there will be new people coming in. Indeed, as of
2018, Putin himself will be “a lame duck” with “the sword of Damocles hanging
over him.”
Given all this, Shevtsova says, one
can predict that this new stage in the development of Russia will be “turbulent.”
And that “unfortunately,” she continues, “will influence” not only Russia but “the stability
of countries located around it” for some time to come.
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