Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 21 – When Vladimir
Putin said last December that he did not plan any purges, Mikhail Khazin says, “between
the lines” was the message that “if you force my hand, then I will do so.” And given the increasing activism of liberal
opponents of the Kremlin leader, the economist says, this time may not be “far
off.”
On the YouTube channel Den’-TV,
Khazin argues that many of the problems Russia faces have been created by or are
at least being exacerbated as a result of the conflict of liberals with Putin’s
conservative positions (newizv.ru/article/general/21-03-2020/mihail-hazin-liberaly-mobilizovalis-na-poslednyuyu-bitvu-s-putinym-i-trampom).
Their clash is now coming to a head,
he continues. “In medicine, this is called the crisis when the immune system is
struggling with the illness. The immune system consists of our patriotic forces
which want to save Russia, and the illness is the liberal infection which has
been spreading among us since 1956 when Khrushchev said satisfaction of
material needs was the main task.”
Now, just as they did at the end of
Soviet times, liberal Russians are talking about empty shelves and a decline in
the standard of living as a way to try to turn the people against Putin. The Kremlin leader has responded with the conservative
amendments to the Constitution as a way of solidifying his support.
And having pushed these conservative
amendments, Putin then arranged to have his time in power extended so that the
conflict about succession would be put off for decades. But if the liberals
keep up their attacks and disrupt the system, the Moscow commentator says, it
is entirely possible that the Kremlin leader will take additional steps against
the liberals.
Khazin stresses that “the return to
conservatism is a return to responsibility, and any individual who recognizes
that it is necessary to go back to conservative values must today support the
president.”
He suggests that “Putin’s ‘conservative
transition’ is essence is analogous to what Trump is doing in the US. This is
hardly because the presidents have ‘conspired’ but because circumstances are
pushing them in this direction. One must understand that they both by mentality
are rightist conservatives, although Putin may be a little more to the left.”
In the near term, Khazin says, Putin
may follow the course that some in Spain and France are now advocating and move
to re-nationalize some major firms. “Just imagine,” he says where the liberals
would be if major Russian firms ceased to be privately held! They would lose one
of their most important support groups.
That is not the only “card” Putin
has in “his pocket,” the economist says, although he concedes that it is far
from easy to say exactly what the Kremlin leader will do next. But he clearly feels the need to respond to
the liberal threat, and it is possible that he will soon fire those like Nabiullina
at the Central Bank and finance minister Siluanov who are among its leaders.
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