Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 23 – Leadership
transitions in authoritarian post-Soviet states and in other authoritarian
states abroad have been largely and remarkably peaceful and easy, Sergey Shelin
says, prompting the question: why are Russians now so worried about the
transition to a post-Putin leadership?
The answer, the Rosbalt commentator
says, is that Russia not only wants such a shift to be confirmed by the
population, reflecting its combination of European and Asian qualities, but has
already given in to the temptations of foreign adventures and thus Moscow views
aggression as a solution the Kremlin will use in this case as well.
As a result, many are nervous about
the possibility that despite the dangers and high costs, the Putin regime,
either to keep him in power for longer or arrange for a transition to a new
leader, will embark on a new round of aggression to absorb all of Belarus
and/or part of Kazakhstan (rosbalt.ru/blogs/2019/03/22/1771192.html).
Many Russians assume that there will
inevitably be “grandiose difficulties” in changing one autocrat to another in
their country, Shelin says; but “the history of the post-Soviet countries shows
that where there is an autocracy, the replacement of even a deified leader who
dies suddenly and has not been able to legitimate his successor takes place
quickly and easily.”
Moreover, Russians assume, he
continues, that Putin’s replacement must be found soon, although the Kremlin
incumbent won’t approach Nazarbayev’s years until the 2030s. Putin thus has plenty
of time to put in place arrangements for someone to replace him. But that isn’t
the way Russians are talking now.
They act as if Putin has little time
and must hurry, doing something dramatic like seizing Belarus and/or part of
Kazakhstan in order to create a new state of which Putin could then become
president of. But that notion is wrong
on two counts: Putin doesn’t need to do either to remain or organize a
succession, and both actions would be high-risk operations.
But there are two important ways in
which Putin’s challenge is different and greater than Nazarbayev’s, the Rosbalt
commentator says. On the one hand, Russian leaders are more concerned about
getting popular legitimation than the leaders of Kazakhstan or
Turkmenistan. The latter can thus act
completely at will; Putin is always looking over his shoulder.
And on the other, Shelin continues,
Putin having acquired the taste for foreign adventures and used them to “solve’
domestic problems is all too likely to fall into the same pattern this time
around. Kazakhstan and China are concerned about development and thus avoiding
isolation; Russia isn’t and isn’t.
That makes Putin’s coming years more
frightening not only for Russia but for the countries around it.
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