Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 30 – Despite the
expectations of many, Sergey Shelin says, the past year has not been as
dramatic in Russia as the three immediately preceding; but there did occur
three surprising developments with which the country must cope in 2018:
continuing economic decline, the regime’s loss of the youth, and the Kremlin’s fears
of its ability to control the past.
First of all, the Rosbalt
commentator says, many beginning with the regime initially expressed their
belief that the Russian economy was coming out of the crisis; but it soon
became clear that if it was no longer falling, the economy was not set to grow
either and would remain stagnant into 2018 (rosbalt.ru/blogs/2017/12/29/1672295.html
).
That stagnation given
what is happening elsewhere in the world means that Russia will fall further
and further behind most countries, and that development in turn, Shelin
suggests, will add pressure on the regime to look for “some kind of new model
of government economic behavior.” Indeed, that may be the defining feature of
the coming year.
Second, and more dramatically, the
Russian government for the first time lost the country’s young. “The street actions which took place in the
spring and summer” are “only a symptom of this turning away” from the
government, a development that is “one of the most important for the entire
late Soviet and post-Soviet decades.”
Perestroika and
the reforms after 1991 were the work not of the young but of the middle aged, “and
only in 2017 did all this begin to change literally in front of our eyes,” to
the surprise of both the regime and specialists on youth attitudes. Only opposition figure Aleksey Navalny appeared
to recognize this shift and even based his campaign on it.
“Having lost the youth in 2017,”
Shelin continues, “the regime reacted to this in the same way that it responded
to the loss of the intelligentsia in 2011 or in general to any difficulties be
they moral, online, industrial or financial with a Bacchanalia of increased
control, supervision, and monitoring, not with even the smallest effort to recognize
or change its archaic nature.”
The Kremlin did try to suggest that
it was appointing a new generation of technocrats to positions of authority,
but it quickly became obvious that these people were even more “indifferent to
the people than their predecessors were. They cannot pretend to any public
authority” because trying to gain that is now “strictly prohibited.”
The third surprise, Shelin says, was
perhaps the most unexpected of all and
superficially appeared distinct from the other two but in fact was not. That
was the failure of the regime to commemorate in a massive way the centenary of
the revolutions of 1917, a commemoration that many had expected for some years.
But instead of doing so, the regime
simply went silent, a reflection of the judgment at the top that any moves by
it could be “poorly received by the masses” and create a dangerous situation in
which many Russians would begin to question the adequacy of their rulers not a
century ago but now.
“In the eyes of the powers that be,
the revolutionary jubilee was distinguished from the only problems only by the
fact that it was technically easier to ignore than the banking crisis or the
street demonstrations,” Shelin suggests.
These three surprises
marked a year in which the regime did not suffer the major failures many had expected
but also “could not achieve any successes either.” Instead, for the last 12 months, the regime
has marched in place, thus pushing the country ever further into a dead end as
ever more people could see. But “what the eyes feared, the hands continued to
do.”
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