Paul Goble
Staunton,
July 11 – Vladimir Pastukhov says that “the Russian and in words liberal and
democratic opposition is becoming ever more like a totalitarian sect for which
all who do not share its ‘symbols of faith’ are irredeemable enemies and
heretics,” a dangerous development that threatens the future both of democracy
in Russia and of its intellectual elite.
What
the UK-based Russian historian is referring to is the increasing tendency of
Russian liberals and democrats to take pride in or show support for any outstanding
Russians be they in the arts or in sports if the latter show themselves in any
way to be linked with or supportive of Vladimir Putin (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2018/07/08/77081-totalnyy-diktat).
All too often, Pastukhov says, the
democratic opposition “does not see gradations of evil, does not distinguish
cause and effect … but expects from everyone” the application of political judgments
on all things according to its own views, something that has the effect of “condemning
it to loneliness and isolation” and precludes any political victory.
But of course, he continues, the
opposition “does not need any victory in fact: its raison d’etre consists in
the existential suffering of its status as the liberal elect” that has assumed
the right to judge everything even those things far from politics according to
a single political standard – is the person close to or supportive of Putin or
not?
“Part of the Russian intelligentsia,
in response to the Putinist counterrevolutionary ‘ours-ism’ is opposing a
revolutionary ‘not ours-ism,’ an extremely problematic intellectual attraction
which includes as ‘enemies of democracy’ all those who do not stand openly in
opposition to the regime and even more all those who continue to cooperate with
it,” Pastukhov says.
This not only leads such
intellectuals into a political blind alley but undermines the principles of
intellectual life which they proclaim. One simply must not “equate the authorities,
the regime, and the Russian cultural class.” These are different things, but
they are none of them homogeneous or entirely mutually exclusive.
Sometimes, as in the case of the
arguments over whether to support the Russian team in the World Cup, this “principledness”
reaches the point of absurdity. Indeed, one can say that this is an example of
the Hegelian principle that everything that starts as a tragedy is repeated as
a kind of farce.
Over a century ago, Lenin took great
pride in the achievements of his country and carefully kept them separate from
his hostility to the regime. As a result, he came to power and imposed a regime
that was in many ways far worse than his predecessor. But he did come to power.
Those who today in the name of
ideological purity decide to root against the Russian team in the World Cup not
only “do not recognize and are even ashamed of their own ‘nationalism,’” but
also put themselves in a position where we will never know what they will do
because “they will never come to power.”
Pastukhov continues: “Although the
Russian cultural class is not consistence in the defense of its principles and
is not prepared openly to struggle for its ideals, it as before in general is
oriented toward individual freedom, including political, to tolerance and humanism
and is foreign to foreign and arbitrariness” and thus has little in common with
Putin’s regime.
“Unfortunately,” he continues, “one
can hardly say the same thing about the Russian political class, including its
very active fraction which has made as its slogan the struggle ‘for a European
choice by Russia.’” It truly is cutting
a window to Europe but in what can only be described as a “truly Asiatic” manner.
And consequently, “in this, unfortunately,
it doesn’t go far from its antagonist, the Russian powers that be.” Both are promoting the idea that who is not
with us is against us, something that contributes to the temporary
strengthening of the regime but undermines the most fundamental nature of the
intelligentsia.
“One of the main problems of the
regime, which over the longer term will inevitably lead to its collapse,” Pastukhov
says, “is that it is in a stat of cognitive dissonance with a quite powerful
and broad cultural class of Russia. But in a paradoxical way, the main opponent
of the regime – the liberally inclined Russian political class – manifests a
problem which can have for it analogous consequences.”
According to the Russian historian, “the
prospects of real democratization of Russia will appear only when the Russian
cultural class convinces the Russian political class that it is the latter’s
ally and not its opponent.”
“In contrast to other European peoples,”
Pastukhov says, “the Russian political class does not have the same borders as
the educated class and instead forms a small subset of it. In Russia even those
for whom politics is their daily work – the bureaucracy, the oligarchs and the
top managers of state corporations – are apolitical.”
According to the historian, “the behavior
of the Russian political class and the Russian cultural class, especially in periods
of crisis, gets out of synch. As the crisis
deepends, the Russian cultural class becomes ever more demonstratively
apolitical, grotesquely loyal to the authorities … [while] the Russian political
class” isolates itself by denouncing all and sundry.
The political class increasingly
adopts “black-white thinking,” one that allows for no shades or
gradations. But “happily,” Pastukhov continues,
“real life is more complicated and various and more interesting” than
that. People are seldom all one thing or
another: they are a mixture of many things.
To respond effectively to that
situation, he says, the Russian political class must stop asking only whether
something is “good or bad for Putin” and concentrate instead on what is “good
or bad for Russia.”
“The war in Ukraine and Syria are
bad for Russia, and against this war, one must fight,” Pastukhov says. “A
victory in the match with Spain and a good came with the Croatian squad is good
for Russia, and one can be proud of that. The construction of stadiums for the
World cup is good for Russia, but the theft and excessive spending is bad.”
“Therefore, one must struggle with the
showiness and the corruption but be at the same time proud of the stadiums.”
“Not everything that Putin does is
bad for Russia.” One must oppose those things he does that are bad for the
country but not denounce any good just because he is somehow associated with
it. The Russian political opposition
must remember that and remember he isn’t going to be around forever. It needs
to begin to see the world as complicated as it really is.
Not surprisingly, Pastukhov’s words
have infuriated some in the Russian political class who see them as a call to
cooperate rather than oppose Putin – see for example Igor Yakovenko’s attack at
http://www.ej.ru/?a=note&id=32673
– but that is to misread the historian’s call for the opposition to adopt a sophisticated
strategy rather than one that will ensure its continued defeat.
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