Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 22 – Vladimir Putin’s failure to provide a picture of the future in
his address to the Federal Assembly and growing indications that the power
vertical on which he has relied is “decaying” (themoscowtimes.com/2019/02/22/the-kremlin-hierarchy-is-fast-decaying-a64589), ever more
people are talking about what a post-Putin Russia might be like.
Today, three Russian commentators,
one in Moscow, one in the US, and one in Ukraine, provide extremely suggestive
but in some ways mutually exclusive visions of what Russia will look like once
the current Kremlin leader passes from the scene as will inevitably happen
either voluntarily, by the force of circumstances, or as a result of death.
In the first, economist Vladislav
Inozemtsev argues that Putin’s Russia like
the Soviet Union before it has entered into a confrontation with the West and turned
away from normal economic and political development mean that the Putin regime
will pass away along with him, just as was the case with Stalin or Gorbachev (echo.msk.ru/blog/partofair/2375953-echo/).
In the second, Irina Pavlova, a
Russian historian based in the United States, fundamentally disagrees. She
argues that the future will be much like the present and the past. And she
suggests that that someone even more authoritarian and Stalinist, like Lavrenty
Beria, may come after Putin departs (ivpavlova.blogspot.com/).
And in the third, Georgy Kasyanov, a
Russian historian at the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, argues that the
departure of Putin will be “a catastrophe” for Ukraine and other nearby
countries because a leadership struggle within Russia would likely involve
actions abroad to build authority (apostrophe.ua/article/politics/foreign-policy/2019-02-22/smert-putina-stanet-katastrofoy-dlya-ukrainyi-v-chem-opasnost/23937).
Given the number of unknowns, none
of these three nor indeed anyone else can specify exactly what will happen; but
all three of these and many other commentators as well capture some of the complexity
of the situation, one in which after Putin both the leaders and the population
will undoubtedly fashion a future but similar and different from today.
Over the last 150 years, Russia has
gone through numerous leadership, generational and political changes. Sometimes
there has been a change at the top without changes in broader policies, but
sometimes the change at the top has ushered in massive changes, some of which
have proved sustainable and some not.
That past is instructive – in this
Pavlova is correct – but it has not always been a straightjacket – and in this
both Inozemtsev and Kasyanov point to certain patterns that open the door to change. As the end of the Putin era approaches – and while
no one knows when and how it will end –
ever more people are going to weigh in on what it might be.
Their suggestions not only will lead
many to ask new questions but they will also form in some cases a roadmap however
incomplete it will inevitably prove to be.
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