Paul Goble
Staunton,
October 24 – Vladimir Putin has created a modernized form of the Roman
Praetorian Guard in the form of the Russian Guards and related security
agencies in order to protect himself against any challenge, Alfred Kokh
observes; but it appears he has forgotten that the Praetorians often turned on
their creator and became the key power in the Roman state.
In
yesterday’s Yezhednevny zhurnal, the
Russian commentator recalls that when the Roman emperors created the Praetorian
Guard in classical times, they intended it to be the chief protector of their
own persons. As such, the Praetorians were the only armed force allowed in the
city (ej.ru/?a=note&id=33045).
The Roman army, in contrast, was
kept busy beyond the confines of the city and was not allowed to cross the
Rubicon River lest it become a political force of its own. But the Praetorian
Guard often played an evil joke on its creators or at least on their successors:
it became the key power in the state, removing and replacing emperors or even
installing one of its own.
That is a danger that faces all authoritarian
leaders: the defenses they built if they are strong enough to do their job are
also strong enough to overthrow their creators – or at the very least to become
a power in the state with which their creators and nominal bosses cannot fail to
take into consideration.
Kokh is suggesting
that something similar may happen in Russia; and it is a measure of the extent
to which he has pointed to an issue that the Kremlin is worried about that the
full version of his article has been taken down from the site – only the first
paragraph remains -- lest the very discussion of this possibility make it even
more likely.
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