Paul Goble
Staunton, April 21 – Vladimir Putin
finds himself caught in a variety of paradoxes none more glaring than his
simultaneous need to defend the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact by which the USSR
became an ally of Nazi Germany and his need to celebrate the Great Victory over
the Third Reich, according to Yevgeny Ikhlov.
On the on the one hand, the Moscow
commentator says, Putin needs the Great Victory because it completes the shift
from a focus on communism as the explanation for the Soviet Union’s win to one
on Stalin and his totalitarian system as the source of that triumph (vestnikcivitas.ru/pbls/3741).
And
on the other “and at the same time,” the Kremlin leader is prepared to defend
with “all the authority of the Russian state” Stalin’s alliance with Hitler which
is “delicately called ‘the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact’” because “that pact for the
first time legalized zones of Soviet influence” beyond the borders of the USSR
and based on “continuity” with the Russian Empire.
This is just one of the insights
contained in Ikhlov’s article about the importance of mythologizing the past in
a country like Putin’s Russia, one where “the weaker the institutions in the state
are, the stronger must be the all-embracing mythology.” Indeed, his system is
based on the idea that “the picture propaganda provides of the world is the
only reality for the population.”
Up to a point, this approach has
served Putin well. It has “rooted Putinism in Russian political history.” But the problems begin when one tries to make
that political history consistent, something that is virtually impossible
without blatant falsification because various events point in so many
contradictory and incompatible directions.
And that in turn means, Ikhlov says,
that “the more improvisations are introduced into this renewed cult, the
stricter will be the struggle to ‘defend history from distortions and
falsifications’ … There are many countries which have introduced punishments
for denial of crimes against humanity … but there are only a few which [like
Russia today] are criminalizing the unmasking of historic crimes.”
The
approaching celebration of Victory Day, of Russia’s attempt to take credit for
the defeat of Nazism, highlights this “real schizophrenia” in Moscow’s position:
“One should not call oneself the main victor over Hitlerism while being proud
of the alliance with this same Hitlerism” at the start of Hitler’s war to “seize
Europe.”
There is a logic in each of the
narratives, Ikhlov argues, but trying to bring them together into a single
narrative is “impossible,” because “to be at one and the same time an
anti-fascist, an anti-communist, and an anti-liberal in the contemporary
understanding of the ideological spectrum cannot be done.”
The only way it can be done, he suggests,
is with “one’s own fascism,” or as Putin would put it “’the Russian world.’”
But
there is a deeper paradox and problem for Putin, Ikhlov says. It consists of
the fact that Russian history consists of a series of “hermetically sealed
periods,” each of which engages in the denial of its predecessor, as the late philosopher
Aleksandr Akhizer pointed out a generation ago.
That makes stability very difficult as does “the
struggle of two competing directions” in each, “each of which offers mutually
exclusively approaches to the overcoming of internal crises.” Typically, the
leaders of a country must make a choice; Putin has been trying so far to avoid
doing so.
“Putinism’s difficulties began when it ceased to be simply ‘velvet Pinochetism,’ a regime of authoritarian modernization and began to convert itself into ‘an oprichnina,’ into market Stalinism,” Ikhlov says. That violated a chief requirement of myths: a certain consistency in their internal logic.
According
to the Moscow commentator, “isolationism and anti-Westernism require support in
a messianic legend. But Orthodox fundamentalism remains too much an exotic
phenomenon.” Moreover, it is dangerous because it contains within itself “a
very strong anti-state attitude.”
Moreover,
“all the misfortune of Putinism” is that doctrines like “Moscow is the Third Rome”
have the effect of “denying development and transforming life into an
uninterrupted waiting for the end of the world.”
That
leaves Putin and Putinism with few options, Ikhlov argues. Indeed, the only one
really available is the implementation of a 160-year-old tradition that was “aborted
by Bolshevism – the development of right-wing fascism.”
During that period, he says, Russia
has moved “along a totalitarian arc: from radical-left form in the shape of
Bolshevism with a gradual falling away from utopian pseudo-Marxist ideas to the
side of right-wing totalitarianism which recognizes and cultivates
obscurantism, chauvinism and petty private property.”
This evolution, Ikhlov continues,
has included “periods of black hundreds-style post-war Stalinism, the
anti-market ‘left fascism’ of stagnation … and up to the current dawn of the
Russian conservative revolution, the first conquests of which have already
appeared in Crimea and ‘Novorossiya.’”
“The evolution of totalitarianism
from communism to fascist was broken off only three times – during the five
years of the New Economic Policy, the decade of the thaw, and the ingloriously just
concluded liberal-perestroika thirty year period.” It is now resuming with full force and with
all its contradictions in play.
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