Paul Goble
Staunton, July 1 – For some time, many have been speculating about how long Putin will remain alive and in power; but the death at the end of June of his close friend and aide, who was roughly the same age as the Kremlin leader, has prompted Russian bloggers to speak about the passing of an entire generation of leaders.
Mark Krutov of Radio Liberty has assembled some of their comments which reflect both hopes and fears about the way in which the aging of the current leaders who had seemed eternal in both cases changes things (svoboda.org/a/okruzhenie-putina-redeet-sotsseti-o-smerti-sergeya-ivanova/33792113.html).
Two of the commentaries on Ivanov’s passing seem especially prescient. Yanuta Laiminga says that his death shows that “Putin’s entourage is thinning” and that “soon the country will enter into a period with a series of magnificent funerals,” something that will highlight “the very fragility of the system.”
And Artem Izgagin says that Ivanov’s demise has “something very Brezhnev-like in it. Then, a half century ago, “it also seemed that the leaders of the country were as much part of the permanent landscape as the Kremlin wall; but then it turned out that they were mortals” and so too was the system they had led for so long.