Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 20 – The Kremlin
has some completely rational reasons to order repeated searches of Aleksey
Navalny’s staff offices: it keeps the police and judicial system occupied and
well paid and ensures not only that the opposition will be kept off balance but
that Russians who might be ready to ally with him will think twice, Fyodor
Krasheninnikov says.
But these rational reasons are
increasingly overwhelmed by Vladimir Putin’s irrational belief that there is a
hidden conspiracy of foreign and domestic enemies who are behind all the problems
inside Russia and that this conspiracy can and must be tracked down and rooted
out, the political analyst says (newtimes.ru/articles/detail/186617?fcc).
The fact that such a conspiracy does
not exist just as witches did not exist in medieval Europe or similar
conspiracies in Stalin’s time unfortunately means that the pursuit of it will
continue to expand precisely as those earlier pursuits of the non-existent did
until some external development forces the system to change.
Navalny’s operations are supported
by the contributions of ordinary Russians, Krasheninnikov says; but because
Putin and his entourage in their villas and on their yachts can’t imagine freely
making contributions to anything, he and they can’t accept the idea that this
is true of the Russian opposition.
The Kremlin believes that if it keeps looking, it will find something incriminating
– “weapons, underground printing presses, leaflets calling for murder, plans
for a revolution, protocols of sessions of terrorist groups, and archives
detailing receipt of millions of dollars” from foreign sources – and so it keeps
looking.
Up
to now, of course, the Kremlin agents haven’t found anything – or at least
anything that they want regime propagandists too use. But the searches continue
and expand not for the rational reason of extracting resources for the police
but for the irrational one consisting of a belief among the Russian leadership
that a conspiracy must exist.
The
Inquisition and those who brought witches to trial in earlier centuries acted
because those engaged in this struggle were fighting something that did not
exist; but if witches and heretics didn’t, something worse did – a conviction
among those doing the fighting that the devil and magic did.
More
immediately, Stalin was irrationally convinced that “the USSR was surrounded by
enemies” who were engaged in conspiracies against it and that “any dissatisfaction
with the system was viewed not simply as a crime but as membership in the
internal opposition directed from abroad by the hated Trotsky and all-powerful
foreign intelligence services.”
Such
conspiracy thinking is useful to any “ineffective authority” because it explains
all problems as being the result of the work of “world evil in the form of the US,
Soros, the Rothschilds, and the devil himself,” Krasheninnikov continues.
From
this follows “only one conclusion.” Searches and arrests will continue as long
as the person at the top of the power pyramid believes in a conspiracy that
doesn’t exist but wants evidence that it does presented to him. When one is going after something that doesn’t
exist, there is no reason ever to stop.
And
thus, the political analyst says, it is completely possible to suppose that
sooner or later some creative individual in uniform will be found who will
fabricate” the evidence that Putin wants for the simplest of reasons: “if the
bosses want precisely than, then why not make them happy?”
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