Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 17 – After a lull
in the middle of this decade following the Crimean Anschluss, the number and
size of protests against regime policies have increased, although there are
difficulties in measuring the exact dimensions of this change because the regime
doesn’t report or understates things while organizers sometimes boost numbers
for their own reasons
Eurasianet commentator Ivan
Aleksandrov discusses the complexities involved in reaching any exact
assessment and also the regime’s increasingly repressive response to those who
protest against it (russian.eurasianet.org/россия-число-протестов-растет-власти-не-идут-на-уступки).
In
addition to repression which certainly frightens some Russians away from any protest
action, he says, the Russian authorities have steadfastly refused to make
concessions – and that may keep even more people from expressing their undoubtedly
increasing anger at life around them via demonstrations.
After
all, if demonstrations do not achieve their goal of changing policies, many are
certain to conclude, why get involved at all?
And while Aleksandrov does not draw this conclusion in so many words, it
is the failure to make concessions that may be the Kremlin’s best weapon
against having to face a population in the streets.
In
the short term, that is likely to be true and work to the advantage of those in
power by demobilizing the population politically. But over the longer haul,
rising anger combined with an absence of willingness to negotiate and make
concessions is likely to radicalize some in the population, lead them to engage
in violence, and legitimate such actions among larger groups.
That
is what happened in the Russian Empire in the decades before the 1917
revolutions, and that alone should be a warning that what may appear to be a
successful strategy now is likely to turn into something else especially since
blocking protests or refusing to negotiate with those who engage in them can
easily turn into something more threatening almost overnight.
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