Paul Goble
Staunton, May 11 – Both supporters
and critics of the Putin regime often say his regime lacks an ideology –
Aleksandr Podrabinek is only the latest (svoboda.org/a/28471232.html) – but in fact,
Irina Pavlova says, it does: “traditional Russian great powerness (velikoderzhaviye), cleansed of communism
and dressed up in Orthodox clothing.”
Not only should this be obvious to
even a casual observer as such events as the just-concluded celebrations of
Victory Day, the US-based Russian historian argues that the chord that this
ideology has struck with the Russian people, one much deeper than communism
ever did, explains support for Putin and Putinism (ivpavlova.blogspot.com/2017/05/blog-post_10.html).
The majority of
the Russian population accepts the idea that Russia must be a great power
regardless of the price because it is surrounded by enemies, Pavlova says.
Indeed, one can say that “if you ‘scratch’ a Russian, you will find a great
power chauvinist.” Russians are ready to
“talk for hours” about the greatness of Russia and its power.
This is “a fait accompli” and it won’t be significantly changed if it is
adopted as a formal ideological platform, the historian continues. Attachment to the core ideas of
greatpowerness “unites the powers, the elite, the people of Russia and also a
significant part of progressive society” elsewhere.
This idea has its roots in the 16th
century idea of Moscow as “the third Rome.”
Over time, “this idea was transformed into an ideology” and now has
taken the form of what may be called “Russian fundamentalism,” whose followers accept
without question four key notions without asking that they be proven.
First, Russians believe that “the
Russian people is the bearer of a special morality and a special feeling of
justice.” Second, they reject “the spiritless West as a model of societal
development. Third, they have a “vision of the future of Russia as an empire.”
And fourth, they are “certain of its special and unique historical mission.”
That is an ideology, Pavlova says, whatever
those who deny its existence suggest.
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