Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 15 – After Vladimir
Putin passes from the scene, Mikhail Ivanov says in an essay for the Riga-based
Russian conservative Harbin portal, neo-Marxism is likely to take center
stage for awhile but do little to change the national Bolshevik system that has
dominated Russia since 1917.
He says that this is “no secret”
among “the majority of White Russian and the pro-European inclined rightists”
because they know that “the anti-Russian, anti-European and on the whole ‘anti-White’
system founded by the Bolsheviks after October 1917 and preserved to this day”
isn’t going to be easily dispensed with (harbin.lv/prekrasnaya-rossiya-budushchego).
That system has put down such deep roots
and raised more than one generation of people, he argues, that escaping from it “under current
conditions is almost impossible and it is improbable that it will go away
completely” even if it is shaken by changes in the composition of people in
power in the Kremlin.
“This system will change only its
wrappings, leaving unchanged the rotting candy inside” -- although the author
says he would very much like to use another less polite term. With each new
wrapper, some will be deceived and see it as a change to welcome or oppose; but
those who see what is really inside will remain in relationship to it as they
were.
According to Ivanov, the next new “packaging
will again involve a playing with ‘liberalism’ and ‘democracy’ as in the 1990s.
Only in contrast to the 1990s, the future ‘liberalism’ and ‘democracy’ will
have a clear neo-Marxist coloration.” It won’t matter very much who is the nominal
leader because the system will in fact continue.
“Two forces which form the skeleton of the
present-day neo-Bolshevism system – the members of United Russia and the
siloviki” will continue to dominate things albeit under different names. And
any lustration, if it happens at all, “will be extremely superficial and purely
for show,” the Harbin writer says.
The system understands or should, Ivanov
says, “that the quicker such a synthesis takes place, the fewer changes there
will be that the cursed people will come out into the streets with cobblestones
or Molotov cocktails with all the ensuing and irreversible consequences from such
a development.”
The West will be charmed by the new
packaging of “’the bright Russia of the future’” because it will play to all
the themes liberals in the West care about – “tolerance, gay rights, feminism,
and so on” – without touching the fundamental property and power relations of
Russian society.
“Alas,” Ivanov says, “I don’t see
any political force which could oppose this trend and take power into its own
hands.” The only way forward is to articulate a set of ideas that could capture
the population, including “tough anti-communism, anti-neo-Marxism, and
extremely tough anti-imperialism.” Such
a combination would have a chance to produce a right of center but European-oriented
Russia.
That probably won’t happen, he
suggests, and so Russia will go through another cycle of playing at democracy
but continuing to be what it has been, one that will deceive many inside the
country and out and only make the situation worse for both.
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