Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 29 – Many in the West
were taken aback by Vladimir Putin’s attacks on liberalism in his recent
Financial Times interview, but two Russian commentators have pointed out what
should have been obvious to everyone: Putin has been fighting against what he
defines as liberal values his entire professional life.
Petr Mezhuritsky, who lives in
Israel, is blunt: “Putin from his youth has been a professional fighters
against liberal values, which the USSR KGB considered a hostile ideology” even
though his ascent to the highest office in Russia was possible only because of
the partial victory of liberal ideas in Russia (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5D17583B83F3B).
According to the
Kasparov commentator, Putin was clever enough “for 20 long years not to
acknowledge his hatred for liberalism.” But now he feels no constraints in
doing so because of changes in Russia and changes in the world and so is quite
prepared to speak out against liberalism and even to take credit for being the
leader of those who oppose liberalism.
“Civil freedoms in Putin’s mind are
imaginary,” Mezhuritsky says. “And that attitude toward civic freedoms the
Muslim and Chinese worlds completely share with Putin.” Indeed, “to speak out
today in defense of liberal values can only idealists as it should be noted has
always been the case.”
The Kremlin leader, of course, “has
never been an idealist but rather a pragmatic Russian nationalist.” He knows
very well that “even in the countries of liberal democracy the full and final
triumph of liberalism at the level of ideology has never happened. Judaism and
Christianity in themselves do not consider liberal democracy the only state
system pleasing to God.”
“With medical precision,” the
commentator continues, “Putin has described the place of liberalism in the
world today as extremely shaky” and declared that there is “a crisis in liberalism”
in many countries. He didn’t directly
call for the destruction of its advocates, but his ally Chechen leader Ramzan
Kadyrov has done just that.
Hatred of liberalism exists in many
places, and Putin is “not alone” in his feelings. Instead, he now accurately
believes that the world is moving in his direction and that the liberal
verities are being rejected by more and more people not only in his country but
even in the bastions of democracy, the United States and the United Kingdom.
Liberals, of course, have made this
easier for him by not living up to their own principles.
Russian blogger Mikhail Pozharsky
expands on this by explaining how Putin’s hatred of liberalism grows out of his
worldview, a worldview that has guided his policies first within the borders of
the Russian Federation and more recently in his subversive interventions in
other states (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5D170219C9B3D).
For Putin and
those who think as he does, there are only “two forms of societal
construction.” The first is “the polis (in antiquity), the nation state (in the
modern era) and the society of citizens. This is what Putin calls
‘liberalism.’” The second is “the empire, ‘the old order, fascism and Nazism
(in the 20th century).”
In the first kind of society, the
fundamental social unit is the citizen. Power is established and transferred by
formal procedures and is not viewed as sacred. Instead, it is viewed as a source
of rules “universal for all the citizens of the community,” something that
requires “a developed bureaucratic apparatus.”
In the second kind, power is “more
unlimited,” isn’t based on formal procedures but on “mystical rituals” intended
to cement “the unity of the ruler with the people … The basic social unit is
not the individual but the group,” the rural community, the social stratum, the
city or so on. These often enjoy real autonomy as long as they don’t challenge
the ruler.
Each of these kinds of state
considers the other “evil.” For lbierals, “the paradigm is freedom of the
individual to live as he wants in the framework of universal law. And no one
except the law can give him orders.?
“In the paradigm of imperial
conservatism, freedom is freedom of the community to lvie according to ‘traditions,’
‘customs,’ or the decisions of the majority, even if this majority wants to
burn witches, throw stones at adulterers, or eat children for breakfast, lunch
and dinner.”
Consequently, “when Putin says that
the elite of Western countries is cut off from the people,” Pozharsky
continues, what he is talking about is representative democratic where some are
chosen to make laws but are isolated from “’real things.’” In his vision of empire, the people and the
ruler unite in such things as the “direct line” program.
Putin is opposed to any universal
principles except the right of those with power to impose it on others. Thus,
when he condemns migration in Western countries, he isn’t condemning migration
as such but only the notion that migration should be allowed according to some
universally recognized law.
Thus, Pozharsky concludes, Putin is “a
completely sincere anti-liberal and champion of ‘the old order.’ It is just
that this ‘old order’ looks like present day Russia and always has.”
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