Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 25 – The suggestion
by the late Russian political scientist Aleksey Salmin that the Soviet system
consisted of “five concentric spheres of influence” provides the basis for
understanding Vladimir Putin’s policies because the Kremlin leader is seeking
to restore all five of these “rings,” according to Paweł Kowal
Kowal,
a former Polish diplomat who served in the European Parliament and is now a
post-doctoral fellow at the College of Europe, describes Salmin’s “five
spheres” in a detailed article in The New
Eastern Europe and how Putin is proceeding to advance Russian interests in
each (neweasterneurope.eu/articles-and-commentary/2300-the-five-rings-of-the-empire).
According to Salman, Moscow was at
the center of five concentric rings of influence: the RSFSR which is now the
Russian Federation, the former Soviet republics, the Warsaw Pact states and
other communist regimes, and “the fifth ring of imperial influence [which]
included communist parties” as well as groups and individuals in non-communist
countries.
Kowal argues that the post-Soviet
Russian leadership in general and Putin in particular view the world in the
same way and are acting, sometimes in the same way and sometimes in new ones,
to restore Russian power and influence to what they were before the
revolutionary changes of 1989-1991.
Moscow’s response to Chechnya first
under Boris Yeltsin and then under Putin reflected the Kremlin’s desire to
prevent the disintegration of the Soviet empire from spreading into the Russian
Federation. “While the Soviet Union had
collapsed,” Kowal continues, “Russia’s imperial power did not.” Confusing the one
with the other leads to “misinterpretations.”
The Russian regime felt compelled to
block Chechnya from seceding because “what was at stake then was not a small
territory but the principle that not even a small part can be detached from the
Soviet/Federal Russian core,” the Polish analyst says.
“Obviously,” he continues, “the issue of
maintaining Russia’s imperial structure was not limited to geographic
territory. The structure of the security services, the military and economic connections
were all maintained.” And “just as the second (Soviet) Russian empire was built
on the scheme of the five rings … the third (Putinist) empire is being rebuilt
on the same lines.”
Understanding Putin’s approach to achieving that
goal is easier if one recalls the work of two Soviet diplomats in early 1991.
At that time, Valentin Falin and Yuli Kvitsinsky “prepared a special doctrine
which could be seen as a continuation of the Brezhnev one.” They argued that Moscow could “maintain its
influence in Central Europe in the long-term” via “economic pressure,
propaganda and espionage.”
Putin’s approach to the former union republics and
to the former Warsaw Pact states is driven by this conception, Kowal says, as
is his involvement in conflicts like Syria far from Russia’s borders and his “revival
of a network of political parties in the West which cooperate with Russia.”
“Today,
the former fifth ring of the empire plays a similar role to the one it did in
the past. Political victories in the West are, like during the Cold War, one of
the key elements of Russia’s imperial power. [But] unlike Soviet times, these
parties are not communist but are largely populist and nationalist with a wide
plethora of views.”
“The
common denominator of these parties, however, is that they aim to weaken the
unity of the EU, increase skepticism towards the West and undermine
transatlantic co-operation,” and “Russian oligarchs play a key role here as
well … a new factor … that did not exist in the past, but which gives the
Kremlin additional strength when it comes to investing in the West, not to mention
bribing western elite.”
“The first political party of this kind to receive
financial support from Moscow has been France’s National Front. … In fact, the
ability to meddle in the internal politics of the old democracies, such as the
United Kingdom and the United States, is a huge asset in the rebuilding of
Russia’s power.”
According to Kowal, “it is most likely that its
effectiveness has already exceeded the levels known during Soviet times.” He
adds that “The turning point in
the history of the far right Comintern (or, as Czesław Kosior has called it,
the ‘Putintern’) was the 2014 illegal seizure of Crimea. Support for the
annexation by a western organization can be interpreted as a symbolic joining
the Putintern club and paying a tribute to the Russian president.”
The Polish analyst notes that “the Kremlin has
masterfully exploited the potential offered by social media and the relative
pacifism of western states that allow politicians to creep towards the Kremlin
narrative.” Russian oligarchs and their money play a key role. Indeed, their
month “has turned out to be one of the most toxic elements poisoning the
liberal economic system.”
“The West, for the moment, appears helpless in
tackling these challenges. Confronting Russia has to start, first and foremost,
with a cleaning of its own backyard from Putin’s influence.” And there must be a
recognition that what Putin is doing is not just rebuilding “a strong Russia.”
The Kremlin leader’s goals
are much broader, but they are “not grounded in a sustainable economy or sound
social policies.” To counter them, Kowal argues, the West must recognize this
reality and move quickly to reinforce democracy where it is under threat and to
“cleanse” its own house of Putinist agents of influence given their now
nefarious influence.
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