Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 18 – Some of the
Russian activists most committed to Vladimir Putin’s program, people like
Sergey Udaltsov, Vsevolod Chaplin, and Igor Strelkov, are now coming out
against him because the Kremlin leader’s policies have not matched his rhetoric
in which they had passionately believed, Ivan Davydov says.
Such people are extremely varied in
all respects except one, the Moscow commentator says, and that may seem
“paradoxical: all of them are ultra-Putinists.” In fact, they are Putinists to
a much greater degree than President Putin and the more successful comrades in
arms of President Putin” (newtimes.ru/articles/detail/178317).
These people and
others like them do not understand that “the powers that be have many slogans
but only one idea – self-preservation. And for its realization, no ideas are
needed.” Instead, what is required is the ability “to forget what was said
yesterday or even a hour before” and be ready to take an entirely new position.
That makes the Putin regime
extremely inconsistent: it sounds like it is ready to engage in Stalinist
repressions but doesn’t in fact impose them in as thoroughgoing manner as its
words suggest. And as a result, the Putinist “ultras” are disappointed: they want
the regime to live up to its words and be consistent.
Were the powers that be to do so, Davydov
suggests, it would please these Putinists, who are more Orthodox than the
Patriarch; but it would undermine the regime which survives only by not being
consistent and only by constantly changing directions. As a, Putin risks losing these Putinists; but
at the same time, the Kremlin leader knows they have nowhere else result to go.
But this situation shows something even
more important, the commentator argues. Those in power “don’t need ideological
supporters. In recent years, nationalists, then imperialists, then people
calling for the revival of Stalin’s USSR have been disappointed” when they
found out that the regime isn’t really on their side.
Some have suffered in silence and a few
have even ended up behind bars because such people have now been able to
recognize the obvious: the Putin regime is concerned only with
self-preservation and will use any slogan only to the extent and for as long as
it appears to contribute to that outcome.
As a result, the Putin regime doesn’t need
Putinists who remember everything the Kremlin leader has said and even
promised. It needs people who are intellectually, politically and morally adept
at changing their positions instantly whenever the leader changes his – and
quickly forgetting that he ever took a different position at all.
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