Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 19 – Many people believe that Vladimir Putin and his system do not
have an ideology and point to the “schizophrenic” combination of opposites the
Kremlin promotes as evidence for their conclusion, Igor Eidman says. But in
fact, “there is nothing new in this” as far as the Russian ideological
tradition is concerned.
Putin
appears to lack an ideology only because he appears to be inconsistent when he
promoted both “a cult of Nicholas II and the glorification of Stalin,” for
example. But the Russian sociologist who does commentaries of Deutsche Welle
says that has been typical of a certain strain of Russian nationalist thought (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5BF24ABC5E6AC).
The White
Emigration, for example, came up with a number of ideological trends “which
attempted to combine sympathy for bolshevism and national conservativism,
sometimes in the form of monarchism and clericalism. Among these were the
National Bolsheviks, the Eurasians, and especially the Young Russians.”
Despite
differences, they shared in common, as does Putin’s ideology, “imperialism,
anti-Westernism, anti-liberalism, hurrah patriotism, authoritarianism, and
faith in a special path for Russia. For them it was not that important what the
empire was called. What mattered is that it lives, develops and successful
opposes ‘the eternal Western enemy.’”
In the interwar period,
these ideological trends were much affected by fascist ideas. Indeed, Eidman
says, “one may call them para-fascist.” Putinism, which continues this very same
tradition, has become a form of neo-fascism.
“The Eurasians (especially the left
wing of that trend) and the Young Russians were active sympathizes of Stalinism.
It is no accident that some of them became Cheka agents, for example, the
husband of Tsetayeva, S. Efron). Their ideas have continued up to our time and
influence the views of the Russian elite.”
According to the Russian
commentator, “Eurasianism in the versions of L. Gumilyev and A. Dugin are
popular among Russian siloviki. The church milieu became the preserver of the inheritance
of the Young Russians. Their leader Kazem-Bek returned to the USSR at the end
of the 1950s, worked in the foreign relations department of the church and was
an editor of the Journal of the Moscow
Patriarchate.”
Indeed, at an earlier stage of his
career, the current patriarch, Kirill said that “one must not only remember
Kazem-Bek: one must study him.”
A totalitarian ideology, Eidman
continues, can be an important support “for systemic corruption. That was very
much the case, for example, in corrupt fascist Italy. The corrupt higher ups need a state ideology
in order to hold the population in obedience to itself” – and this is why Putin
pushes this ideology ever more frequently in the media, schools and the military.
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