Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 23 – One of
Ronald Reagan’s greatest contributions to the overthrow of communism and the
disintegration of the Soviet Union was his identification of the USSR as “the
evil empire,” a term that outraged Moscow but inspired many within its borders and
prompted those beyond its borders to talk about decolonization as something
inevitable.
Now, Nikki Haley, the US permanent
representative to the United States, has introduced a term that has outraged
Russian officialdom every bit as much Reagan’s words did. She has referred the government in Moscow as “Putin’s
regime,” a turn of phrase that lumps it together with those of Kim in North
Korea and Asad in Syria.
Russia’s permanent representative to
the UN, Vasily Nebemzya was outraged. “In Russia, there isn’t a regime,” he
responded angrily; there is instead “a lawfully elected president and an
appointed government.” What is striking, Konstantin Gaaze observes, is that the
Russian diplomat didn’t react to Russia being lumped together with them as “the
axis of evil.”
According to the Russian commentator, the
reason lies in the clash “between the political languages of the West and of
present-day Russia. For Haley, a regime is a legal term; for Nebenzya, as for
the entire Russian leadership, it is a political and theological one” (mbk.media/sences/on-nam-rezhim-kak/).
Philosophers have been classifying
governments since Aristotle’s time, but the word “regime,” Haaze says, “appeared
in the late Medieval period” to designate not governments but rather personal
behaviors such as diet. It was extended to governments only after the French
Revolution when people began to refer to the Ancien Regime.
Marx and Engels used it in that
sense as well, and in Soviet times, “Stalin frequently used this term” both
about the arrangements powers made for others and about the specific form of a government
in place but not the entire system. In 1947, for example, the Soviet leader made
the distinction between system and regime.
A system, he said, included
economics and was the foundation, while “a regime is only a temporary and political
phenomenon.”
According to
Gaaze, “negative connotations began to attach to the term ‘regime’ in the second
half of the 20th century,” both in Western and Soviet political
thought albeit “for different reasons.” In
the Soviet Union, the Kremlin referred to unfriendly post-colonial states as
regimes, usually adding the adjective “puppet” or pro-American” to it.
By objecting to Haley’s use of the
term regime for Russia, Nebenzya was doing no more than his Soviet predecessors
had, insisting that Putin’s regime is neither “temporary” or “a puppet” of
someone else.
Haley in contrast, “when talking about
‘the Putin regime, had in mind something entirely different. She was talking
not about a deficit of legitimacy or about the absence of sovereignty.” Rather
the reverse. She and other diplomats who
have now used that term wanted to “stress two things.”
First, for them, a regime is “a group
which has power but which has separated itself from the international community
and acts against its interests.” And second, and even more important for them,
such a group of people “acts exclusively in its own interests” and “against the
objective interests of its own country.”
“The conclusion,” Gaaze says, “is
that the rulers do this exclusively in their own interests. Kim Jong-un, Bashar
Asad and Vladimir Putin above all want to rule and keep power and only then do
something useful for North Korea, Syria or Russia.”
That is very difficult for Nebenzya
to understand because already for a long time, Russian writers have argued that
the interests of Putin and the interests of Russia are one in the same thing.
Instead, they have suggested that without Putin, Russia would not exist and that
if he disappeared, so too would Russia “as a subject of world politics.”
Haley’s words represent an indictment
of the Russian state; and they show that the US ambassador “is thinking about
the interests of the Russian people more than Nebenzya is: Regimes come and go,”
her words imply, “but Russia remains and therefore to put all the blame on
Russia and not on the Putin regime would be an exaggeration.”
And her words contain a message for
Russians: it is entirely legitimate to “distance oneself from the policies” of the
Putin regime which are “harmful for the interests of their motherland.” Putin
is not Russia, she suggests; and Russia is not Putin.
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