Paul Goble
Staunton,
December 29 – There is mounting and incontrovertible evidence that Russians no
longer love or respect Vladimir Putin, Rosbalt commentator Sergey Shelin says;
but the Kremlin leader and his regime are not yet threatened by that alone and
can therefore survive for a long time to come unless something else happens.
Indeed, he says, they can remain in power as
long as “they fulfill at least the minimum of administrative tasks, do long
allow their subjects to be completely ruined, disorganize in a planned fashion
any anti-systemic opposition, maintain a strong defensive apparatus and do not
divide among themselves” (rosbalt.ru/blogs/2018/12/28/1755873.html).
Many who are currently talking about
“the transit of power,” the euphemism for thinking about the exit of Putin and the
arrival of some other leader, often forget about that reality, focusing instead
on developments that are ultimately superficial in comparison with these
critical functions, Shelin continues.
It is certainly the case that Putin
has lost his charisma and probably done so irretrievably. None of his presentations
this year generated much attention or interest, and many provoked cynical
responses. The same thing is true of the behavior of his subordinates who
seldom got much attention except when they become scandalous in their words and
deeds.
“This is one of the main causes of
the general loss of authority of the powers that be,” the commentator says; but
while that has occurred, something else has not. When the authorities take an
unpopular decision, there is no broad wave of protest, even on occasions such
as the pension reform where the Kremlin expected it.
The reason for that, Shelin
continues, lies “in the sharp intensification of the repressive nature of the
system.” To maintain itself, the regime is prepared to come down hard on anyone
it seems a problem. “The rules have
changed” over the last year. But this
shift from “’pro-people’ to ‘anti-people’ style of rule is not a sign of “the
critical weakening of the system.”
The population isn’t starving and it
isn’t in the main suffering either, Shelin says. Any attempt at organizing an
opposition is suppressed almost at the start.
“The power vertical as before imitates the fulfillment of orders from on
high. And “open resistance is exceptionally rare. The foundation of the power of Vladimir Putin
is thus quite firm.”
Some Russians are very dissatisfied,
but they haven’t been able to organize, in large measure because the regime counters
with force any steps in that direction.
There are no independent regional actors: Chechnya’s Ramzan Kadyrov
stands out only as “the exception who proves this rule.”
Nor is any split in the central
administrative machine visible, Shelin argues. “Yes, there are there ‘hawks’
and ‘doves’ and still more unprincipled lobbying clans which fight among
themselves over specific decisions. But when it comes to it, when the leader gives
his final word, they fulfill that which is ordered in a friendly fashion.”
These groups, he says, “can be in
conflict or even open fights only with one another but not with the leader from
whom their positions, material well-being and even personal freedom depend.
Nothing like this was true among the members of the Brezhnev Politburo, each of
whom had an independent status and could at times oppose” the leader. “We don’t
have that” now.
The same thing is true among the
rich. They too fight among themselves but not against Putin either singly or
even more collectively. They are too dependent on him to do either. And they can’t leave in massive numbers
because that would cost them much if not all of what they possess.
Summing up, Shelin says the
following: “Yes, in 2018, the authority of Vladimir Putin significantly fell in
the people and in part even in the administrative machine. But his strength as
a leader did not contract as much namely because the system closed ranks and
began to defend its interests against the broad masses by its fists.”
“And that means,” the commentator
continues, this group “needs tough leadership even more than it did earlier” –
and that is just the kind of leadership Putin still can and does offer. For
that to change, there will have to be crises “much more serious than those
which occurred in 2018.”
These can’t be excluded, but they
aren’t a certainty, Shelin says, adding that in his view, “the regime is fully
capable of rotting peacefully for long years if 2024 were not approaching.” That is because to make the changes to allow
Putin to stay in power requires “popularity” and that he no longer has.
And to arrange for a successor “always
raises questions about the unity of the upper reaches,” something that will
inevitably divide “not only the nomenklatura but also the masses as well.” Putin’s
power declined in 2018 but not as much as many think, except in one area: “the
search for a resolution of the 2024 problem which is becoming ever more
important.”
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