Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 21 – Vladimir Putin
and his country are in far deeper trouble than the Moscow media he controls or
than the Western media which all too often relies on what the Putin outlets say
and views his standing and that of his country almost exclusively as a derivative
of what the West does or doesn’t do.
But in the last 48 hours alone, ten
stories have appeared which suggest neither he nor his country is doing as well
as many would have it, either out of a misplaced sense that Russia’s nuclear
arsenal trumps everything – forgetting that it didn’t save the USSR – or the problematic
conviction that the West needs an interlocutor or a threat.
These ten things do not mean that Putin is
about to be ousted or the Russian Federation collapse. Both he and it have
important reserves, but rather these are offered as a corrective to the all too
common narrative that Putin is a miracle worker and his country is what he
likes to present it, a worthy successor to the Soviet Union. Neither of these
things is true.
Here are the ten:
1. Putin is losing
support at home and abroad. A VTsIOM poll finds that fewer than 50 percent of
Russians now trust him and, for the first time since 2013, Time magazine has
not included him in its list of the 100 most influential people in the world (wciom.ru/news/ratings/doverie_politikam/
and meduza.io/news/2018/04/20/putin-vpervye-za-pyat-let-ne-popal-v-spisok-samyh-vliyatelnyh-lyudey-mira-po-versii-time).
2.
One
part of the Russian government is trying to ban the Telegram messenger service
while other parts are purchasing VPNs and other technology in order to do an
end run around Kremlin policy, thus giving the Kremlin one of its clearest
defeats in a long time (snob.ru/selected/entry/136678
and nv.ua/opinion/yakovina/stolknovenie-s-telehoj-2465568.html).
3.
Senior
officials in Tatarstan and some other non-Russian republics are directly
attacking Vladimir Putin’s language policies and thus Putin personally,
something that they had avoided doing in the recent past out of fear how he
might respond (iarex.ru/news/57280.html).
4.
Russian
officials concede that 68 percent of the medicines Russians use are imported
and that in most cases there is no domestic alternative. If those drugs do not
continue to flow into the country, many Russians will die (forum-msk.org/material/news/14567249.html).
5.
Russian
space industry analysts say that 70 percent of the electronics in Russian
satellites is imported and again there are no obvious domestic alternatives (charter97.org/ru/news/2018/4/20/287083/).
6.
The
only factory in Russia that produces armored personnel carriers for the
military and security forces has just gone bankrupt, an indication along with
delays in the refitting of ships and the production of new ones of severe
problems in the defense industry and in the government’s ability to finance any
significant military buildup (newsland.com/community/129/content/ne-vpisalsia-v-rynok-edinstvennogo-v-rossii-proizvoditelia-bmp-poprosili-obankrotit/6308512).
7.
The
Russian economy has so many bottlenecks that any strain leads to significant
problems. Moscow officials have just announced that the World Cup this summer
will affect when residents of the Russian capital will get hot water in their
residences (snob.ru/selected/entry/136682).
8.
Russian
prosecutors and siloviki are so desperate to improve their statistics about fighting
extremism that they are searching about for anything that they can plausibly or
even implausibly suggest constitutes that “crime.” Among their targets this week:
An Omsk man was charged with extremism for daring to criticize the sad state of
roads in his region (newsland.com/community/7149/content/zhitelnitsu-omskoi-oblasti-obvinili-v-ekstremizme-za-zhalobu-na-plokhie-dorogi/6308189).
9.
With
Russians across the country protesting against improper handling of garbage,
Russia was stung this week by an international ranking which showed that Russia
ranks first among all former Soviet republics in per capita air contamination.
Even Putin has mentioned that there are some cities in the Urals where it is
not safe to breathe (fergananews.com/news/29576).
10.
And
Forbes reports that Russia now has a significantly smaller GDP than the single
US state of Texas does (newsland.com/community/8211/content/u-kogo-bolshe-ekonomika-u-tekhasa-ili-u-rossii/6306913).
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