Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 30 – Every time
Vladimir Putin makes even the slightest suggestion that he is moderating his
position, there is a chorus of people who argue that he is about to scrap most
or even all of his recent policies and return to where he supposedly was at the
beginning of his time as president.
But such hopes – and it is entirely
likely that Putin himself is interested in promoting them to keep the West off balance
and interested in making a deal with some new “new” Putin – are almost
certainly misplaced. According to
Aleksandr Skobov, there is little chance he will stop his drive toward fascism
and allow Russia to become again a normal country.
In a commentary for the Kasparov.ru
portal, the Moscow commentator says that he does not believe “even for a second”
that Putin will return his regime “to some kind of ‘bourgeois normalcy.” Instead,
he argues, “the objective course of events will push the regime further in the
direction of fascism” (kasparov.ru/mterial.php?id=58137B7aADF2FE).
Moreover, Skobov says, he does not
believe in the possibility that “there will appear in the ruling elite some
kind of health-thinking progressive forces.” That group of people is so thoroughly
compromised that “there is no one in it with whom one can enter into a dialogue”
about a better future.
But those just below that level, he
suggests, are very different and may include those who are deeply disaffected
with the ruling elite. “In this milieu,
it is entirely possible that disappointment in Putinism will begin to appear
and at first take the form of a striving to “cleanse from perversions Putinist
legality.”
Up to the present, he continues, “all
attempts to construct a certain moderate ‘Putinism with a human face’ have
failed.” Those interested in doing so have been so attacked by the regime for
even the most modest suggestions that they have moved away from it into
positions of silence or of radical opposition.
But they are the place to look for
the emergence of an opposition within the regime – at least among those who
oppose the use of repressive measures.
And Skobov points to the comments of Moscow blogger Kristina Potupchik
as an example of such people. See her posts at krispotupchik.livejournal.com/694549.html
and krispotupchik.livejournal.com/694523.html.
The
place not to look is higher up the latter or to Putin. Neither those
immediately around him nor the Kremlin leader himself is going to “reinvent” or
“reset” the regime in a way that would meet even the most basic humane
criteria.
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