Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 21 – Many have been
shocked by recent polls showing that 70 percent of Russians now have a positive
opinion about Joseph Stalin, Irina Pavlova says; but if Russians were queried
about the fundamental strategies the Soviet dictator pursued, the share of
Russians supporting those would be far greater, perhaps 90 percent.
Stalin as a name is polarizing
even for Russians, but Stalinist values are widespread, the US-based Russian
historian says, as would be obvious if Russian sociologists were to ask not
whether respondents have a positive image of Stalin but rather whether they
support what were his most central ideas (ivpavlova.blogspot.com/2019/04/blog-post.html).
Such questions would include ones
like the following: “Do you share the idea of Russian great power status, that
is, do you consider that the powers must ‘hold the country together,’ not
allowing it to disintegrate and to assert its influence in the world by all
available means, thus strengthening the status of the country as a great
power?”
Other questions that would get at this
might be: “Do you consider a strong Russia can exist only as a unitary state?”
“Do you support a policy of nationalization or statification not only of the
country’s natural resources but its industry as well?” “Do you think the state
must have the decisive role in the development of industry, science, culture,
the social sphere and health care?”
And still a third group might be
formulated by Russian pollsters in the following way: “Are you a supporter of
the development of military industry as a priority?” and “Do you allow for
non-legal means of struggle with corruption in the pursuit of ‘the cleansing’
of the country of ‘crooks and thieves’?”
Were those the questions Russians
were asked, Pavlova continues, “I assure you that you would get not 70 percent
but 90 percent of Russians giving a positive assessment to Stalin as a state
actor” because they are “the direct result of the special operation at his
elevation which began in the mid-1990s” as part of the program to find a
successor for Boris Yeltsin.
The Levada Center and its team of
people who spring from the generation of the 1960s is far better positioned to discuss
Stalin and Stalinism than is the new generation now in their 40s who in their rush
to use Western terminology are inclined to insist that Russia today lives in “’a
completely different political regime with completely different problems and
challenges.’”
Those who think that way, Pavlova
argues, ignore the continuities in Russian political life and argue that Russia
has “a normal personalist regime little different from ones in other countries.” They think that its “hybrid” institutions are
capable of “waking up” and becoming real, and they are certain that Russia has
a civil society which only needs to be modernized.
This generation of 40-year-olds
rejects any historical analogies, refuses to see in Russian history any
cyclical patterns, and argues, just like the Putin regime does, that there is
only “DEVELOPMENT” – and development just like the kind that is taking place in
other countries around the world.
“Undoubtedly,” Pavlova continues, “such
talk allows this generation to feel itself to be real progressives in comparison
with ‘the Yury Levada generation’ and to look to the future of Russia with
optimism,” something entirely understandable in human terms “but absolutely
baseless from a scholarly point of view.”
“The true cause of such a position
is not only in the inability to understand and analyze Russian reality but in the
lack of any desire to do so.” Unlike the Levada Center, this generation isn’t
capable of calling the Putin system what it is “modernized Stalinism” or
understanding why such a system has reemerged in Russia today.
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