Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 11 – Vladimir Putin
is “a very Soviet man,” Dmitry Gordon says, who does not think or act in ways
that correspond to the demands of the world today. “The time of other people
has arrived,” and Putin has “lost a sense of reality” and thinks that he could
end as Stalin did in 1953. Instead, he may leave as Boris Yeltsin left in 1999.
The Ukrainian journalist and
businessman made those comments on Ekho Moskvy’s Personally Yours
program (echo.msk.ru/programs/personalnovash/2621509-echo/
and excerpted on this point at censoru.net/2020/04/12/gordon-putin-ustarel-i-ponimaet-chto-mozhet-zakonchit-kak-stalin.html).
To understand Putin, Gordon
continues, “one must study history.” An obvious case concerns Putin’s decision
to initially schedule the referendum on the constitutional amendments on April
22, the birthday of Vladimir Lenin. But then “this cursed coronavirus upset all
the cards” the current Kremlin leader thought he could play.
According to the Ukrainian journalist, “Putin is poorly
informed and very much fears mass protests in Moscow.” That is “the lot of all
rulers, especially those who have been in power a long time: he is provided
with information only by those he wants to hear. He is cut off from the
Internet. And so he can’t search for and
find alternative points of view.”
“He
has,” Gordon says, “a distorted picture of the world … Putin is at a crossroads.
He very much fears the appearance of popular anger and prays to God that in
Moscow everything will be fine with the coronavirus because [in his mind] revolutions
and all meetings always begin there. A rising never begins in Vologda or Kostroma
but only in Moscow.”
Putin can’t connect with younger Russians because they don’t care about his “’Russian world.’” He remains “a product of Soviet times who studied in the KGB Higher School and the Andropov Institute totally different things” from those that matter in the world today “which went on ahead.”
He
remains mired in the Soviet past and all the time things about the restoration
of the USSR. But the world today “lives according to entirely different laws!
When the Internet, the iPhone and other new inventions have appeared, you aren’t
going to achieve anything by talking about spiritual bindings.”
Those
notions may work for pensioners living in the backwoods part of Russia, “but a
new generation has grown up” which doesn’t care.
Now,
and precisely because he is so Soviet, Putin is afraid. The collapse in oil
prices contributed heavily to the demise of the USSR. Cheap oil now may
undermine his position. Indeed, Gordon says, he wouldn’t be surprised if one of
his colleagues at some point told him, it’s time to go and you’ll be protected
just as you protected Yeltsin.
“I
think,” Gordon says, that this is how there will be “a bloodless transition of
power from Putin to other people.”
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