Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 29 – Because Vladimir
Putin is interested in controlling Russia rather than in developing it, Dmitry
Oreshkin says, the Kremlin leader has liquidated the federal arrangements that
Boris Yeltsin began to put in place after 1991 and restored the Soviet style of
territorial arrangements.
Under the Soviet system of
territorial management, the center minimized internal differences, ignored what
it could, and resolved problems by the “very primitive” use of force, the
commentator says. Moscow gave orders and
sent out punitive teams; it did not work with the regions (idelreal.org/a/29968527.html).
“The center
decided what it needed on a given territory, it ensured that that territory was
absolutely subordinate and it didn’t matter whether that territory was called Estonia,
Tajikistan or Chukotka,” Oreshkin continues. That is because “all were equally
without rights” and all were “equally subordinate to a single strong man.”
That is what Stalin created; and
that is what Putin has worked to restore.
One of the reasons that he has been
able to do so is the memory in many Russians of the collapse of the USSR. They
believe that asymmetrical federal lines led to the end of their country and
they don’t want to have that happen again. “Therefore, when Putin arrived on the
scene, the first thing he did was to destroy federalism.”
The first step was to undermine the
Federation Council which under Yeltsin had become politically powerful and genuinely
represented the regions and republics.
Then he moved to subordinate the 85 regions to eight or nine federal subjects
to minimize regional differences and make it easier for the Kremlin to tun the
country.
“The power vertical is good from the
point of view of control over territory but it is bad from the point of view of
development,” Oreshkin says. It can move force about to suppress threats
external or internal, but it can’t motivate people to develop the country and
hence Russia has slipped back into stagnation or worse.
What Putin does not understand is
this: Politics is so constructed that “no one will say” when things get bad ‘Guys,
forgive me. I’m an idiot. I cannot guarantee you a good standard of living.’ Instead,
[regional leaders] will always say ‘I’m smart, but there are idiots sitting in
Moscow.’” That is the beginning of the
end of the system.
Yeltsin was compelled to try to reach
agreements with such people; and when he left office, he said that “his main
mistake was the war in Chechnya.” Not just because of its direct costs but
because it marked the end of trying to reach compromises and a return to the
use of force as the ultima ratio within the country.
Today, the regions have little or no
possibility to influence the center; and the center, as in Soviet times, is not
fulfilling its most important functions because it doesn’t have to in order to
survive. That was true in Soviet times, and Putin has made it true again. And there is no good way to escape from this.
“The technology of peaceful
agreements did not exist” in Soviet times and “therefore, when Gorbachev began
to try” to work one out, everything came apart. Now, Putin is not trying to
find a path toward compromise and getting away with it because people remember
what happened when the first and last Soviet president tried.
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