Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 17 – For most of his
20 years in power, Vladimir Putin has set the agenda, defining the course of
events; but in the last six months, he increasingly has been reacting to events
that have arisen beyond his usual control, a shift that in and of itself
changes the nature of his regime, Nikolay Petrov says.
That means that these events rather
than Putin’s plan will increasingly define what happens in Russia even while
the Kremlin leader remains in power because elites and the population will
change their assessment of what he means to the country and the way it
operates, the Russian commentator says (carnegie.ru/commentary/82086).
Putin set as his task this year the
extension of both his time in office and the operation of his political system.
He will likely achieve the first via the constitutional amendments set to be
approved by the July 1 referendum, Petrov says; but while he will stay in
office, he will no longer play the same role he did earlier.
The pandemic and the related economic
crisis came to Russia at just the moment when “the latter was trying to shift
to the future,” Petrov argues. “All old and already weakened institutions …
were out of the game, but new ones of the Big President either weren’t launched
… or were not capable of acting on their own,” at least not yet.
“The battle with the epidemic and
with the technogenic catastrophe near Norilsk showed the impotence of the current
system of administration at various levels,” he continues. Because of this, one can expect a relative
growth in the powers of the prime minister, corporate grounds and regional ones
as well.
And Putin’s own inability to control
events means that he will lose some of his ability to act as an arbiter between
elite groups and that other structures within the regime, like the interior
ministry, the Investigations Committee and the FSB will gain in power, a shift
that may now be done without fanfare but a shift nonetheless.
Most people are focusing on the
referendum, but that is a mistake: at best it is “icing on the cake, but the
cake itself in fact already does not exist.” As a result, whether Putin squeaks
by or wins convincingly, he will not recover what he has lost, at least not by
that means, the Russian analyst says.
The situation in Russia “has changed
radically. The crisis has changed the foundation, the balance between leader,
elites and citizens which had existed” since 2014. And if this isn’t corrected quickly, the
system will continue to degrade ever more quickly and even potentially spin out
of control.
“The political geometry of the regime,
above all the pyramid ‘leader, elite, masses’ is changing.” The masses are in
motion and the leader and elites must change. Unfortunately for the system as
it has existed, Putin isn’t changing, although the elites are beginning to,
thus unsettling things still further.
At the top, the system lacks an
understanding of what is happening or the ability to redesign itself in the
near term. And that means, Petrov argues, that “there will inevitably be cracks”
between the various parts of this geometry, first between the citizens and the
elites, and then between the elites and the leader.
Those are already emerging in
conflicts between regions and the Kremlin, Petrov continues. And that is
raising the question as to how the system will be “capable of ensuring the
loyalty of administrative and business elites.”
Repressive measures alone will work only so long, and without carrots as
well as sticks, they are likely to prove counterproductive.
Indeed, they may deepen the cracks
between leader and people and leader and elites and accelerate the collapse of what
has been the Putin system. This will be first and especially visible in
relations between Moscow and the regions both generally and especially in the always
restive North Caucasus.
“The weakening of the petroleum
dependence of the Russian economy not only will undermine the political
economic base of the regime but lead to its inevitable decentralization when
the self-standing of corporations and regions will increase, possibly to a
return to the model of ‘the wild 1990s.’”
If that proves to be the case,
Petrov concludes, “then the 20 plus years of Putin’s rule will have taken the
country full circle or even down a deeper spiral especially since colossal
foreign policy problems are adding to its domestic ones.” It is possible the Kremlin will find a way
out because of its experiences; but that is only a possibility, not a
certainty.
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