Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 19 – Encouraged
by Vladimir Putin, many Russians now believe that their country will have a
beautiful future, one with a law-governed democratic state, a competitive
economy, and a government that is responsible to and controlled by the people,
Vladislav Inozemtsev says.
Moreover, again encouraged by the
Kremlin, they “almost always” link these positive things to “a powerful
sovereign state occupied a place in the world worthy of its past and present.”
But such dreams are unlikely to be achieved, the economist says, especially
using that mechanism (mnews.world/ru/suverenitet-kak-garantirovannoe-pravo-na-otstalost/).
There are three reasons for
pessimism, Inozemtsev says. First of all, in Russia, “the most important value
was and remains strength as a symbiosis of power and force: the country must be
strong; the authorities must be strong; any anyone pretending in this society
to anything must be strong as well.”
Such an ideology, he argues, “fundamentally
contradicts legal consciousness and no democracy can be established in a
country where the powers are the law and not the individual personality.”
Second, “under conditions of
backwardness which has been reproduced over centuries and which has now
achieved its local apotheosis, society cannot independently create a competitive
economy since the country obviously loses out to the majority of other players”
given its focus on the raw materials sector and on closing off the country from
the world.
And third, Russia’s “rich imperial
heritage inevitably begins to break through in the most varied forms – from ‘Crimea
is ours’ to the inability to accept the values of federalism and integrate
migrants … A country which never developed as a nation will not create a contemporary
internal structure.”
To say this is not to argue that “Russia
will never change.” But rather it is to
say that “the transition to normalcy from the present anomalous system is extremely
improbable.” Widespread corruption,
violations of human rights, and misuse of power simply make that conclusion
more certain
For a genuine renewal of Russia in a
positive direction, “the present-day de facto unitary state” would need to be
replaced by “a new treaty-based federation,” much property would have to be
renationalized and a new and more just privatization follow, and there would
need to be “a complete purge” of Putin era officials.
“Not one of these projects looks
realistic under conditions of the dominant Russian ethnos, the unprecedented
inequality in property ownership, or the involvement of so many millions of people
in the bureaucratic machine that must be cleansed, Inozemtsev continues.
According to the Russian economist, “the
main problem of Russia – and it will not disappear after the transfer of power
from the real Putin to some notional Navalny – is that the state in our country
has priority over society” and maintains that arrangement for force. There is
no reason to think that will change by any conceivable successor.
“The sovereignty of Russia is, in
my view, an absolute evil of its kind since it requires the use of force for
its support, creates in society an atmosphere of tension, gives rise to various
kinds of ‘verticals,’ and as a result pushes the country into archaic forms,”
Inozemtsev says (stress supplied).
“I will say more,” he continues, “nowhere
in the world has sovereignty in the tradition Schmitt understanding been used
so consistently for the legitimation of backwardness as in Russia.” And “therefore
I see only one path for Russia” – its involvement in supranational structures
like the European Union in which some sovereignty is sacrificed for progress.
Occupation like that which Germany
and Japan experienced after World War II would be another option theoretically,
Inozemtsev suggests, but that is not practical at the present time.
“’De-sovereignization,’ leading to ‘the beautiful Russia of the future,’
could be realized after the Putin elite leads the country to economic collapse
and the population spontaneously turns toward West.” But given that the EU
would not be able or want to accept Russia as a member, the better model would
be the ways Norway and Switzerland interact with Brussels now and how the UK will
cooperate with it after Brexit.
Inozemtsev continues: “Of course it
is possible to hope that the next leader of a successful protest wave which
sometime will replace the Putin regime will not soon call to ‘vote with one’s
heart,’ to send tanks into the latest ‘subject of the federation’ unhappy with Moscow
and seize shares” of companies to enrich his or her relatives and friends.
“But this is more the lot of the 20-year-olds
than those who saw both Soviet times and the early democratic Russia and Putinism,”
the economist concludes, of “those who saw and understand that a personality like
Mikhail Gorbachev is to be met in Russian history only once.”
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