Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 18 – Russian commentators
have been so used to an “either-or” approach to the Putin succession question:
either he will remain in power by changing the institutions of the Russian
Federation or he will do so by changing the borders of the country and thus
becoming the head of a new country, Vladimir Pavlenko says.
But despite that widespread assumption,
the Regnum commentator continues, there are compelling reasons to think
that the two in fact are not antithetical but in fact reinforcing and that
changes like those Putin has announced will not slow but rather accelerate the
reintegration of at least part of the former Soviet space (regnum.ru/news/polit/2831435.html).
Raising the issue of transition as
Putin has done, Pavlenko argues, “objectively works for the universalization of
the Russian political system and its adaptation to the interests of other
former Soviet republics.” And in so
doing, the Kremlin leader makes it easier for these countries to cooperate and
even integrate.
That Putin did not talk about
dispensing with the Russian presidency is a signal that this is part of his
calculation given the centrality of presidencies in Belarus and Kazakhstan; and
“it is possible that precisely here one should look for the key to the broadening
of prospects for integration on the post-Soviet space.”
To be sure, Pavlenko continues,
Putin’s words raise more questions than answers as to what is going to come next
not only within Russia but also in its relations with its neighbors. But they
clearly were calibrated not to preclude but quite possibly to make it easier
for integration of at least some of these states possible.
Aleksandr Shpakovsky, a Russian
commentator, expands on these ideas,
noting that the changes in Russia reflect Kazakhstan’s experience and could well
drive Belarusian ones (imhoclub.lv/ru/material/izmenenija_v_rossii_i_interesi_belarusi_novaja_realnost_sojuznih_otnoshenij).
“Russian political scientists
consider that in the future the State Council will become the main center for
the development of strategic decisions as far as government policy is concerned
while the government itself will become to a greater degree technocratic.” They
point to Mishustin’s appointment as evidence of that.
These analysts also suggest, he
continues, that this is designed to insulate the government from political
parties, “including United Russia,” which must bear the burden of popular reaction
to policy initiatives. This shift, of course, reflects calculations about the
2021 Duma elections, Shpakovsky says.
“With regard to Belarus, one must stress
that the reform of government administration in Russia just like the earlier ‘transition
of power’ in Kazakhstan, offer Minsk priceless experience” of how to carry out
transitions without confusion or chaos, transitions that allow for change but only
for carefully managed change.
Despite their differences, “the Belarusian,
Russian and Kazakhstan systems have in common the presence of a strong institution
of presidential power and leaders who have been in office for a long time and with
whose personalities the state itself has gradually begun to be associated,” he argues.
Such arrangements are “more stable”
than “oligarchic parliamentary democracies of the post-Soviet kind,” but they
are “vulnerable” to sudden changes caused by the working of the calendar. What
Putin has done, he suggests, is to reaffirm this commonality and make it easier
for these three countries to work together.
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