Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 15 – Vladimir
Putin and the country he heads are far weaker than Moscow propaganda suggests
and, what is equally important, far weaker than many in Russia and the West
think, the result of a successful combination of propaganda and dramatic action
against those within his country and abroad who are intimidated or unwilling to
stand up to him.
And while it would be a mistake to
underestimate either, it is also a mistake to overrate Putin’s power and that
of Russia because to do so gives him and it victories they do not deserve
because it leads the population of his country and the leaders of Western
countries to underrate their own powers and to assume that there is little or
nothing they can do.
Moreover, to fail to understand the
weaknesses of Putin and those of Russia is to ignore one of the major drivers
of the Kremlin leader’s behavior and thus to fail to anticipate or respond
appropriately to Putin’s actions which in the past and even now are driven less
by his and its real strengths than by his and its profound weaknesses.
Russian political scientist Dmitry
Oreshkin says that Putin has nothing to offer his people to gain their support
and to consolidate public opinion except “militaristic rhetoric and short
victorious wars.” But the effect of those
wars – and there have been three so far – quickly exhausts itself (apostrophe.ua/article/society/2016-10-15/u-putina-sereznyie-problemyi-emu-srochno-nujen-podvig/7760).
Not only do Russians grow bored but they
also discover to their horror that these wars cost money as well as lives, and
at a time when even their leaders tell them “there is no money” and when they
are seeing their standard of living decline, ever fewer of them are prepared to
support such adventures or the authors of such adventures for long.
That is reflected in the decline in Putin’s
standing in the polls. Two years ago, some had him garnering 89 percent; now,
he is getting 74 percent. Still high but not as high as it was, the result,
Oreshkin says, “of the natural disappointment of the people” that “neither the annexation
of Crimea nor the war in Ukraine has brought Russians anything good.”
Valery Solovey, an MGIMO professor who
comments frequently on politics, is even more blunt: “the powers that be in
Russia are not very firm. They try to give the impression of a strong, self-confident
and even brutal state. But this is an exaggeration, an attempt to frighten the
external world and Russian society” (rusmonitor.com/valerijj-solovejj-ya-ne-uveren-v-sposobnosti-rossijjskojj-vlasti-vyderzhat-skolko-nibud-sereznye-vyzovy.html).
Indeed, he adds, he is “not certain in the
ability of the Russian powers that be to withstand many serious challenges. If
such challenges occur, then we will see that all those who show their absolute,
even lackey-like devotion to the supreme power will suddenly turn out to be
disloyal and even members of the opposition.”
Solovey says there are essentially two
challenges ahead: “the probability of mass social dissatisfaction which can
combine with political protests” and “destabilization in the elite and splits
in the elite in the vent of mass pressure from below.” There is already evidence of infighting
within the elite over resources and even distancing from the Kremlin.
So far this infighting has not led to
direct splits. Members of the elite are still afraid of Putin even if they believe
he is ineffective or wrong. One major entrepreneur supposedly was told recently
to stay in line because “Khodorkovsky’s prison bed is still available.” Fear
matters to many, but there are still “some
sincerely loyal” people, although even they “are beginning to express doubts
about the future of the country and their own well-being.”
Putin has miscalculated in Syria: he didn’t
get the grand bargain from the West about Ukraine he expected, and members of
the Russian elite can see this. “But the
main challenges to the Kremlin,” Solovey says, “will come not from outside but
from inside the country.” Once the domestic scene begins to shake, then the
impact of foreign events will matter even more.
And Kyiv military expert Aleksey
Arestovich states bluntly that “Russians for a long time already do not have
any chances to seize even a small piece of Ukrainian territory let alone cities
of a million people” or more like Odessa. Suggesting otherwise simply plays
into Russian propaganda (apostrophe.ua/article/society/2016-10-14/poslednij-vzlet-voennoj-mysli-rossiyan-stoit-li-opasatsya-zahvata-odessy/7777).
“One must understand,” he says, “that
Russian military might doesn’t exist. This is a media product.” Even its military buildup now is not about an
attack but about defense against what some in Moscow expect will be a NATO
advance. That is clear if one looks at
the situation of the Russian army.
It has about 330,000 soldiers in the land
forces. Ukraine has 400,000. To change that equation, Arestovich says, “Russia
would have to declare a general mobilization and rearm the military. But they
will not do this because as soon as such a mobilization began the Russian
economy would collapse, the West would introduce additional sanctions and all
the couch lovers of ‘the Russian world’ would begin to run away.”
Moreover, the Kyiv military analyst says,
Putin has been backing down repeatedly in recent months as any examination of
his words about Novorossia, then LNR and DNR and then Ukraine show. He faces more opposition abroad and at home.
And “if Russia clashes with the US in Syria, it will lose.”
“The result will be a strong hit to the
image of Putin as a strong politician. After such a defeat he may try to do
something in Ukraine or in the Baltics. But all the same, his military
opportunities remain limited and that means that his attacks would have the
character of local operations.”
But while they would be local operations,
they would be interpreted in the West as indications of Putin’s “complete insanity”
which “for Ukraine would mean a further rapprochement with NATO and the receipt
of lethal weapons,” things that would raise the costs to Russia of any
action.
Moreover, this would mean that there would
not be any politicians left in the West who could defend Putin and he “would
become an enemy of the entire civilized world.”
That too “would accelerate the defeat of Russia,” something that the
Ukrainian analyst suggests people in the Kremlin are well aware of.
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