Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 6 – Aleksandr Golts,
a Moscow specialist on military affairs and the deputy chief editor of
Yezhednevny zhurnal, says that Vladimir Putin’s greatest fear is that his security services
will refuse to open fire on Russians who may seek to overthrow his rule and
thus he has created the Russian Guard as a last line of defense.
But that organization despite its
size – 400,000 men – and leadership – its commander is Putin’s former bodyguard
may prove an unreliable force because while the order to fire may come down
from the top, mid-level and junior-level officers may ultimately refuse to
carry it out (dsnews.ua/world/-putin-pokinet-kreml-tolko-vpered-nogami--04072017220000).
In an interview
given to Galina Ostapovets of Kyiv’s Delovaya
stolitsa, Golts says that Putin is not afraid of a war with NATO. Instead, “Putin’s
paranoia consists of the fact that he supposes that the West and NATO may at
some moment organize a ‘color’ revolution in Russia” and that he will be ousted
from power.
One must understand, the military
analyst says, that “people who have usurped power never say to themselves that
they have usurped power. They tell themselves that the Russian people is
special, with a very difficult fate, and its simply not ready for democracy.” Hence the need for “administered democracy.”
Even more to the point, Golts
continues, “the experience of 1991 hangs over Putin, when Soviet paratroopers
having held conversations with the KGB special forces replied that ‘no, we will
not shoot’” at the population. That fear
explains why the Kremlin leader created the National Guard which he believes
will “fulfill any order.”
But the reality is that when “a
critical situation arises,” it won’t be his old bodyguard who “comes running
with a pistol. Decisions will be taken by specific individuals,” Golts
continues. “When the order comes to open fire, this means that inside the country
the situation has become critical.”
In such a situation, Putin and
Zolotov, the commander of the Russian Guard, may give orders, but no one can
know in advance whether it will be obeyed. “Everything depends on the specific
situation and on the level of motivation of these people. In 1991, the forces
refused to shoot, but in 1993, they did.”
Golts made a number of other
noteworthy observations during his interview. The five most significant are the
following:
- Russia and NATO have entered a new cold war as a result of Russian aggression in Ukraine, and an arms race has begun as well. Both are certain to last a long time. NATO has already proven its worth by putting forces in the Baltic countries and Poland. After the Western alliance did that, Putin stopped talking about his “Novorossiya” project.
- Putin has not and indeed cannot choose a successor. The system he has established precludes that. He is the only one who holds things together. “If he disappears, chaos will ensue.” Thus those around him will work to ensure he doesn’t disappear. When he finally exits the scene, “he will leave chaos behind.”
- “Putin is not the chief problem. Yes, he is a manipulator, but to a much greater degree he is an expression of the prejudices and misconceptions of the Russian people which still hasn’t digested the disintegration of the Soviet Union.” When Putin does leave, it is far less likely that any democrat will take over than someone who will “play on these prejudices” and more Russia “further along the path of oligarchy and authoritarianism.
- The Arctic region is going to the site of intense competition military and otherwise between Russia and the US.
Once Moscow and Washington do return to conversations, among the first subjects they must address is cyberwar, something few understand and no one yet knows how to counter.
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