Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 20 – Vladimir
Putin’s increasingly vulgar language has attracted more attention – see some
examples at lenta.ru/articles/2016/10/18/manners/ -- but a more
important trend, Valery Koronevsky says, is the Kremlin leaders proclivity for
giving the impression that he just came to office and must correct all the
mistakes that someone has made in recent years.
Running as an outsider when you are
not and running away from one’s record when one would like to avoid being held
responsible for it are common features in Western democracies, but this shift
in Putin’s rhetoric after 16 years in office is something new in Russia and in
his reign and may thus point to radical changes ahead.
On the pro-communist portal
Forum-MSK.org, the Moscow commentator notes that “Putin talks and talks and
talks; and everything is correct and wide and really necessary, but there is the
impression that he only just received power, only today, and intends that it is
necessary to finally do something” (forum-msk.org/material/politic/12371581.html).
“Finally,” Koronevsky
continues, “HE has received power and now is putting things in order. Optimism
has appeared and hope is reborn and to listen to him is interesting and
attracting, and his speeches inspire. Now, we will finally show progress … And
only somewhere in the corner of one’s memory is the question – and where were
you all these last 15 years?”
“What was [Putin] waiting for all
these years? What did [he] process so wisely and confidentially every year? And
what was done?” “Remember the doubling
of GDP?” that Putin talked about. Now, Dmitry Medvedev admits that it is at the
same level as in 1990 and that “a quarter of a century in fact was lost.”
“And where today is this ‘modernization
of the political system’?” the commentator asks. And who remembers about these good intentions
and the official plans and declarations of the President of Russia?” From one
year to the next, the same promises, and at no time are there any results.
That Russians should begin to ask
what after all Putin has in fact done for them over the last 16 years is
interesting, but that he should begin to talk as if not he but someone else
were in office and that he now must take action to correct everything is far
more so.
On the one hand, it suggests that
Putin in his alternative reality is increasingly losing touch with the world in
which his own people are forced to live. But on the other, it may mean that he
has concluded that the only way forward is to act as if the past never happened
– or at least that he isn’t responsible for.
In the former case, such questions
could presage a further erosion of Putin’s standing among the Russian people.
In the latter, it could open the way for him to make truly radical policy and
personnel changes, something that could send shockwaves not only through the
population but through those who have been his closest colleagues in the past.
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